Tench Coxe, a member of the second rank of this nation's Founders and a leading
proponent of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, wrote prolifically about
the right to keep and bear arms. In this Article, the authors trace Coxe's
story, from his early writings in support of the Constitution, through his years
of public service, to his political writings in opposition to the presidential
campaigns of John Adams and John Quincy Adams. The authors note that Coxe
described the Second Amendment as guaranteeing an individual right, and believed
that an individual right to bear arms was necessary for self-defense and
hunting, as well as for militia purposes and protection against oppression by
large standing armies.

The views of this important Founding Era political commentator and public servant
inform the ongoing Second Amendment debate. The authors argue that Coxe's
depiction of an individual right to bear arms encompassing hunting,
self-defense, and the public militia power supports the "Standard
Model" of the Second Amendment prevalent in the legal literature.

***

INTRODUCTION .............................................................. 348
I. "TO KEEP AND BEAR THEIR PRIVATE ARMS": THE ADOPTION OF THE CONSTITUTION
AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS .................................................. 353
A. Who Was Tench Coxe? ............................................... 353
B. Before the Constitutional Convention .............................. 357
C. Defending the Proposed Constitution ............................... 359
D. The Bill of Rights ................................................ 366
II. COXE'S SERVICE IN THE WASHINGTON AND ADAMS ADMINISTRATIONS AND THE
ELECTION OF 1800 ........................................................ 368
III. ARMING THE MILITIA: COXE IN THE JEFFERSON AND MADISON ADMINISTRATIONS 374
A. Coxe's Concept of Federal Arms Policy for the Militia ............. 376
B. Coxe's Role in Arming the Militias ................................ 379
C. The Quality Controversy ........................................... 383
D. Coxe's Examination of the State of the American Firearms Industry . 387
IV. FIREARMS, GAME LAWS, AND MONARCHY ..................................... 389
CONCLUSION ................................................................ 398

*348

Introduction

Under medieval English law, common law pleadings in a civil case would proceed until
the matter could be settled by the resolution of a single fact or question of
law. [1] The continuing debate about whether the Second
Amendment [2] guarantees a right of the American people to
keep and bear arms, or a power of state governments to have a militia, likewise
can be resolved by focusing on the political leader in the Early American
Republic who wrote more than anyone else about the right to bear arms: Tench
Coxe.

Tench Coxe, a Philadelphian, wrote numerous widely-circulated articles in favor of the
new Constitution proposed in 1787 and, later, about the proposed Bill of Rights.
He was appointed to subcabinet positions (just below a Cabinet Secretary) by
Presidents Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and Madison. In the Jefferson
administration, his duties included procuring firearms for militiamen who could
not afford to purchase their own weapons. From his appearance on the national
stage in the late 1780s until his death in 1824, Coxe wrote prolifically, with
his work appearing in major newspapers, in lengthy reports for Presidents, and
in personal correspondence with leading political figures.

Today, Coxe is known to economic historians as a leading forerunner of the American
Nationalist School of economics, with his advocacy of a "balanced" and
self-sufficient national economy emphasizing both agriculture and manufacturing.
[3] *349Coxe is known to political historians for his role in the election of 1800,
during which he wrote articles charging President Adams with being sympathetic
to monarchy. [4] To legal historians, Coxe is known best
for his federalist writings in 1787-1788, in favor of the new Constitution. [5]
The Supreme Court has quoted these writings approvingly [6]
and Coxe has been recognized as one of the "other Federalists"-men
such as John Dickinson, James Wilson, and Noah Webster-whose federalist
writings, while not contributing as much to enduring political theory as did
those of James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay in The Federalist,
played a major role in winning popular support for the Constitution and in
explaining what the Constitution meant to its contemporaries. [7]

Coxe also is central to the ongoing Second Amendment debate. In the past two decades,
the once-ignored Second Amendment has been the subject of scores of law review
articles. Almost all of these articles adopt what now is called the
"Standard Model" of the Second Amendment-the interpretation that the
Amendment guarantees the right of individual Americans to own and carry
firearms. [8] In the *350Standard Model literature, Coxes is discussed frequently, [9]
while critics of the Standard Model never acknowledge his existence or address
his writings. [10] But even in the *351Standard Model literature, the focus has been almost exclusively on Coxe's
writings in 1787 to 1789, in derogation of his subsequent writings and his
service in the subcabinet, both of which reveal important aspects of what the
right to keep and bear arms meant to its early advocates.

As the Standard Model has become a widely-shared consensus among legal scholars
who have written on the Second Amendment, the competing "states'
rights" theory of the Second Amendment has nearly vanished from legal
literature. Instead, the opponents of the Standard Model have adopted what might
be called the "nihilist theory" of the Second Amendment: The Second
Amendment "had no real meaning." [11] Garry
Wills first advanced this view in a New York Review of Books article in which he
asserted that James Madison, author of the Second Amendment, had pulled a hoax
on the entire nation: despite what Madison's contemporaries thought, the Second
and Third Amendments have no content. [12] In a letter to
the editor, Glenn Harlan Reynolds quoted the most contemporaneous known
exposition of the Second Amendment-a newspaper article written by Tench Coxe
just days after Madison introduced the Bill of Rights in Congress. [13]
Coxe described the Second Amendment as an individual right; Madison wrote Coxe a
letter praising *352Coxe's article. [14] Wills replied angrily that just
because Madison wrote Coxe a nice letter approving Coxe's article "does not
mean that Madison agreed with it." [15] Indeed, if
Madison were so dishonest that he would defraud the American nation when writing
the Bill of Rights, it would be reasonable to expect that Madison would also be
less than forthright in his personal correspondence.

Thus, as Wills acknowledged implicitly, to accept Coxe's view is to accept the
Standard Model. Wills was not right to dismiss Coxe so curtly. Tench Coxe
certainly was not in the first-tier of historical importance with his friends
James Madison and Thomas Jefferson; but the Dictionary of American Biography
does conclude that Coxe "was a handsome, winning person, capable and
versatile, high in the second rank of men of his day." [16]

The evidence for the Standard Model of the Second Amendment is overwhelming even
without a consideration of Coxe. For example, there is no writing from 1787 to
1793 that states either the "states' rights" or the
"nihilist" thesis. [17] All legal scholarship
dating from the creation of the Second Amendment and extending through the first
decades of the twentieth century considered the Second Amendment to guarantee an
individual right. [18] Furthermore, the Supreme Court
repeatedly has treated the Second Amendment as guaranteeing an individual right,
and never as anything else. [19]

Still, Tench Coxe is important. No one in the early republic wrote more about the right
to arms than did Coxe. Second Amendment topics discussed by Coxe include the
nature of a "well regulated militia," the meaning of a "free
state," the *353constitution of "the people," the penumbras of "keep"
and "bear," and the "arms" protected from infringement.[20]

This Article is divided into four Parts, each of which corresponds to major
developments in the republic's early history and to Coxe's attention to the
right to keep and bear arms. Part I discusses Tench Coxe's emergence as a
leading proponent of the Constitution. After tirelessly defending the proposed
new government from anti-federalist criticism, he championed the Bill of Rights,
including the Second Amendment. Part II considers Coxe's service in the Treasury
Department of Presidents Washington and Adams, and concludes by highlighting
Coxe's heralding of the Jeffersonian banner against President Adams in the 1800
election and his chastising of Adams for his alleged neglect of the militia.

Part III explores Coxe's role in arming the populace in order to avoid standing
armies. As purveyor of public supplies under Presidents Jefferson and Madison,
Tench Coxe encouraged the American firearms industry and procured arms for
militias in the period leading up to the War of 1812. At the request of the
Madison administration, Coxe undertook a thorough analysis of the American
economy, including the role of the burgeoning gun manufacturers. Finally, Part
IV reveals the aging warrior's effort to defeat the election of another Adams as
president. Writing against the candidacy of John Quincy Adams, Coxe provided his
most comprehensive exposition of the protection of the right to keep and bear
arms accorded individuals in republics and of the infringement of this right by
monarchies.

I. "To Keep and Bear their Private Arms": The Adoption of the Constitution and the Bill of Rights

A. Who Was Tench Coxe?

Tench Coxe came from a family that continually held a leading role in public affairs.
His great-grandfather Daniel Coxe was a physician to Charles II and to Queen
Anne. [21] Although Daniel Coxe never left England, he
served nominally as Governor of New Jersey by purchase of land, and bought other
large tracts of land throughout America. [22] He attempted
to settle a colony of Huguenots in Virginia, but failed. [23]
Daniel Coxe's son, also named Daniel Coxe, served as a colonel in the British
Army stationed in North America. [24] He settled in
Pennsylvania and served, *354first, on the colony's Supreme Court, later, as Speaker of the Assembly and,
still later, on the New Jersey Supreme Court. [25] Daniel
Coxe was, as his grandson would be, a strong advocate of American unity. In
1722, he wrote a book proposing that an assembly of delegates from each state
and a national executive could unite the American colonies. [26]

Tench Coxe's maternal grandfather was Tench Francis, "the undisputed leader of
the Pennsylvania bar of his time," [27] whose
eloquence earned him the appointment of attorney general of Pennsylvania in
1741. [28] One of Tench Coxe's uncles (by marriage) was
Chief Justice Edward Shippen of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. [29]
Coxe's cousin Tench Tilghman served as a negotiator with the Onandaga Indians on
behalf of the Continental Congress, and then as aide-de-camp to General
Washington throughout the Revolutionary War. [30] Through
the Tilghmans, Tench Coxe was related to one of the leading families in Maryland
and Pennsylvania, composed of outstanding lawyers who also served as militia
officers and in the Continental Army. [31]

Tench Coxe was the twenty-year-old son of a merchant residing in Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania when the War for Independence broke out in 1775. [32]
Coxe's company carried on a thriving business with Loyalists and the British
army when the British occupied Philadelphia [33]-a
business which would have been impossible if the British military commanders had
decided not to allow it.

There is no indication that young Tench Coxe played any role in the Pennsylvania
Constitutional Convention of 1776, during which delegates adopted a State
Declaration of Rights stating: "That the people have a right to bear arms
for the defence of themselves and the state ...." [34]
The Constitution also provided that " t he freemen of this commonwealth and
their sons shall be trained and armed for its defence" [35]
and that " the inhabitants of this state shall have liberty to fowl and
hunt" in unenclosed lands. [36]

After radical Patriots took power, Coxe left Philadelphia for a few months only *355to return when British General Howe occupied the city in September 1777. [37]
Coxe remained in Philadelphia after the British departed in 1778, and some
Patriots credibly accused him of having Royalist sympathies and of having served
briefly in the British army. [38] Although Coxe's trading
successes during the period of British occupation lent considerable support to
the charges, nothing came of the allegations, and the Revolution ended before
Coxe became active in politics. [39] The Pennsylvania
militia records of 1780, 1787, and 1788 listed Coxe as a militia private. [40]

Whatever Coxe's attitude during the first part of the Revolution in Pennsylvania, the
events of the Revolution seem eventually to have influenced Coxe's political
philosophy on the issue of men and arms, because most of what Coxe later wrote
about the connection between arms and freedom was consistent with revolutionary
Patriot philosophy. For example, Coxe, like the delegates who created
Pennsylvania's 1776 Constitution and like other Patriots of revolutionary
Pennsylvania, saw a direct connection between the right to hunt and the strength
of the militia as a check on tyranny. [41]

When occupying Philadelphia in 1778, British General Howe had disarmed the
population. [42] As reported in Philadelphia newspapers,
General Gage had done the *356same to the citizens of Boston in 1775. [43] Although
it is not known how Coxe reacted to the disarmament at the time, his later
writings are aligned closely with the political *357philosophy of vehement opposition to firearms confiscation that Patriots of
the time expressed in Philadelphia.

B. Before the Constitutional Convention

When the Revolution ended, Coxe formed the international merchant firm of Coxe &
Frazier [44] and began to take an interest in political
reform. In addition to playing a leading role in the Philadelphia Society for
Alleviating the Miseries of Public Prisons, [45] Coxe
served as secretary of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of
Slavery, [46] of which Benjamin Franklin was president. [47]
In 1786, Coxe represented Pennsylvania by serving as the secretary for the
Annapolis Convention, the effort to revise the Articles of Confederation, which
set the stage for the constitutional convention the following year. [48]
Coxe also was appointed to represent Pennsylvania in the Continental Congress. [49]

Firearms were among the many commodities dealt in for many years by the firm of Coxe
& Frazier. A sample of business records from 1786 illustrates the *358company's involvement in the firearms businesses, and also reflects
politico-military conditions at that time. Several New York militia companies
lacked sufficient muskets of a common bore, and ordered two hundred stands from
the firm. [50] The State of Georgia ordered five hundred
stands of arms for the Georgia state militia, and a Southern distributor
observed how dangerous conditions were in the deep South: "you apprehend
they will want them for there is scarcely a doubt, but they will be engaged in
an Indian war-if they should not purchase we apprehend this state South Carolina
will ...." [51] A Northern distributor who ordered
from Coxe likewise noted how the people were arming themselves in response to
political instability: "The present uneasiness in Massachusetts Shays's
Rebellion has caused a great demand for muskets, in consequence of which we have
disposed of about three hundred of yours with bayonets & c at three dollars
each ...." [52] Like most others in the arms
business, Coxe made arms for private purchase (the firearms sold in
Massachusetts), for state militias (Georgia), and for local militia groups (New York).

In the summer of 1787, while the constitutional convention met in Philadelphia,
Coxe presented a paper urging industrial development to the Society for
Political Enquiries at the house of Benjamin Franklin. [53]
The paper presaged the major role Coxe would play in the Jefferson and Madison
administrations by promoting an early version of American industrial policy. [54]
Among the articles that he promoted for domestic manufacture were gunpowder and
ironworks. [55] While the convention was meeting, Coxe
delivered a major address about the need for government to promote invention.
Madison probably knew of Coxe's remarks, as Madison soon after proposed to the
Constitutional Convention that Congress should have authority to encourage
discoveries through premiums and provisions. [56]

*359

C. Defending the Proposed Constitution

Less than ten days after the constitutional convention in Philadelphia ended,
Tench Coxe began defending the Constitution in a series of essays published in
the Philadelphia Independent Gazetteer and reprinted throughout the United
States. [57] He sent the first two essays to James Madison
in New York, explaining: "My anxiety in favor of the new federal
Constitution has induced me to attempt some comments on it, that might render it
more clear and agreeable to the people at large .... [58]
Madison responded: "I have received & perused with much pleasure the
remarks on the proposed Constitution for the U.S. which you have been so good as
to favor me with." [59] Madison promised to see that
the articles were republished in Virginia and kept his promise. [60]

Justice William Brennan, citing one of Coxe's essays about the jurisdiction of
federal courts, noted that Coxe had been "widely reprinted" during the
ratification debates. [61] Justice White described Coxe's
essays as "the first major defense of the Constitution published in the
United States." [62] Coxe's biographer Jacob Cooke
elaborated upon the importance of Coxe's writings: "Although Coxe's essays
were not in the same literary league as The Federalist , they perhaps were
contemporaneously more influential, precisely because they were less scholarly
and thus easier for most readers to follow.... As Madison, Rush, and other
contemporaries recognized, Coxe's writings ... contributed materially to the
Constitution's adoption." [63]

While some historians in previous decades tended to look only to the authors of The
Federalist (James Madison, Alexander Hamilton, and John Jay) to understand the
arguments made for ratification of the Constitution, modern historians have a
broader view; many recognize Tench Coxe-along with writers such as James *360Wilson, John Dickinson, Noah Webster, and others-as a leading defender of
the Constitution, one of the influential "other" Federalists who
played a major role in shaping the debate over the Constitution. [64]
Indeed, even Garry Wills admits that Tench Coxe "coordinated the efforts at
ratification, establishing a network of communications with federalists
everywhere." [65] Thus, it is not surprising that
Coxe has been discussed and cited many times by legal historians-including
scholars as diverse as Michael McConnell [66] and Herbert
Hovenkamp [67]-regarding the original understanding of the
Constitution.

In the fourth of a series of essays defending the Constitution, Coxe argued that,
should tyranny threaten, the "friends to liberty ... using those arms which
Providence has put into their hands, will make a solemn appeal to 'the power
above."' [68] Hence, the new Constitution did not
need a declaration of rights any more than the Articles of Confederation did:
"Neither of them have a bill of rights, nor does either notice the liberty
of the press, because they are already provided for by the State Constitutions;
and relating only to personal rights, they could not be mentioned in a contract
among sovereign states." [69] As for the alleged
danger of a standing army: "The militia, who are in fact the effective part
of the people at large, will render many troops quite unnecessary. They will
form a powerful check upon *361the regular troops, and will generally be sufficient to over-awe them
...." [70] Coxe wrote Madison of this installment:

At the request of Mr. Wilson, Dr. Rush and another friend or two I added a 4th.
paper, calculated to shew the general advantages & obviate some of the
Objections to the System.... [I] wish that you and Col. H[amilton] may make
any use of them, which you think will serve the cause. [71]

Madison replied that he had disposed of the papers as directed and had given copies to
Alexander Hamilton: "I have no doubt that he will make the best use of
them.... The 4th is a valuable continuation, and I shall be equally desirous of
seeing it in the Virginia Gazettes; and indeed in those of every State." [72]
The installment was published widely, [73] and the series
circulated as a vital part of the national debate. [74]

The argument that the militia would be sufficient to over-awe a standing army was
persuasive in Pennsylvania, [75] the first state to call a
convention. But antifederalists *362at the convention were not convinced. As John Smilie warned: "Congress
may give us a select militia which will, in fact, be a standing army-or
Congress, afraid of a general militia, may say there shall be no militia at all.
When a select militia is formed; the people in general may be disarmed." [76]
James Wilson, who had urged Coxe to write "An American Citizen IV," contended
that the Constitution already allowed for the ultimate force in the people: " In its principles, it is surely democratical; for, however wide
and various the firearms of power may appear, they may all be traced to one
source, the people." [77]

The Pennsylvania Convention adopted the Constitution in mid-December of 1787, but
not without strong opposition. [78] A large number of
delegates had opposed the new Constitution, especially if it were not to contain
a bill of rights. The anti-federalist delegates explained their reasoning in The
Dissent of the Minority of the Convention. [79] The
Pennsylvania minority castigated the majority for not allowing the proposal of
amendments-in particular a bill of rights, which would have provided in part:

That the people have a right to bear arms for the defense of themselves and
their own state, or the United States, or for the purpose of killing game; and
no law shall be passed for disarming the people or any of them, unless for
crimes committed, or real danger of public injury from individuals .... [80]
*363

Coxe immediately set out to refute the objections of the convention minority. Under a
pen-name, "Philanthropos," Coxe pointed out that the Pennsylvania
minority's demand for a bill of rights had not (yet) been raised by prominent
antifederalists in other states:

The right of the people to fish, fowl and hunt, the freedom of speech, provision
against disarming the people, a declaration of the subordination of the
military to the civil power, annual elections of representatives, and the
organization and call of the militia, are considered by the minority of our
convention, as on an exceptionable footing; but none of these are even
mentioned by [G]overnor Randolph, [M]r. Mason or [M]r. Gerry. [81]

Coxe further contended, in another article, that the minority's fear of the
federal standing army was ridiculous, as was the minority's fear that the
Congress might disarm the people:

The power of the sword, say the minority of Pennsylvania, is in the hands of
Congress. My friends and countrymen, it is not so, for THE POWERS OF THE SWORD
ARE IN THE HANDS OF THE YEOMANRY OF AMERICA FROM SIXTEEN TO SIXTY. [82]
The militia of these free commonwealths, entitled and accustomed to their
arms, when compared with any possible army, must be tremendous and
irresistible. Who are the militia? are they not ourselves. Is it feared, then,
that we shall turn our arms each man against his own bosom. Congress have no
power to disarm the militia. Their swords, and every other terrible implement
of the soldier, are the birthright of an American. What clause in the state or
federal constitution hath given away that important right.... T he unlimited
power of the sword is not in the hands of either the foederal or state
governments, but where I trust in God it will ever remain, in the hands of the
people. [83]

*364

Of this series, Coxe's modern biographer has written: "The articles signed 'A
Pennsylvanian' were Coxe's most noteworthy contribution to the ratification
debate and invite comparison to the best of the literature spawned by that
controversy, including the Federalist essays, which Coxe approvingly quoted and
to which his work was superior in its treatment of some subjects." [84]
It is possible that Coxe influenced the writers of The Federalist, because
Madison and Hamilton had read and disseminated his publications before composing
their own, and there is some similarity among them in treatment of subject
matter. [85] For instance, after having read "An
American Citizen IV," Hamilton argued in The Federalist No. 29 that an
"army can never be formidable to the liberties of the people while there is
a large body of citizens, little, if at all, inferior to them in discipline and
the use of arms, who stand ready to defend their own rights and those of their
fellow- citizens." [86]

Such was the cross-fertilization of ideas that, before Coxe published his thoughts on
the power of the sword in the hands of the people, Madison had sent Coxe The
Federalist No. 46. [87] Madison rejected fears of a
federal standing army, because to a regular army "would be opposed a
militia amounting to near half a million of citizens with arms in their
hands." [88] Madison lauded "the advantage of
being armed, which the Americans possess over the people of almost every other
nation." [89] That the federal standing army would be
held in awe by popular militias ready to defend strong state governments and
individual liberty was part of the pro-Constitution philosophy developed by
Coxe, Madison, Hamilton, and other federalists. [90]

*365Among the advantages Coxe saw in the new Constitution was the fact that ex
post facto laws "are exploded by the new system." [91]
The explicit prohibition on ex post facto laws would raise peoples'
consciousness of their rights and encourage them to armed revolt against any
future government that attempted to impose ex post facto laws:

If a time of public contention shall hereafter arrive, the firm and ardent
friends to liberty may know the length to which they can push their noble
opposition, on the foundation of the laws. Should their country's cause impel
them further, they will be acquainted with the hazard, and using those arms
which Providence has put into their hands, will make a solemn appeal to
"the power above." [92]

In other essays written in response to the objections of the Pennsylvania
minority, Coxe argued that the new federal government would not be able to
interfere with the state militias, because the Constitution provided that each
state would train its own militia and choose the officers for its militia. [93]

*366

D. The Bill of Rights

Federalists cited the existing guarantees for personal rights in the state constitutions, [94]
the presence of an armed populace, [95] and the lack of a
granted power in the proposed Constitution to infringe upon individual liberties
[96] as precluding the need for a bill of rights. In
keeping with this approach, Coxe questioned the wisdom of considering amendments
before the experiment had been tried. [97]

In 1788 Coxe served as one of Pennsylvania's last delegates to the Continental
Congress, which held its final session early the following year. [98]
In the meantime, the requisite nine states ratified the Constitution. [99]
As a compromise with the Constitution's opponents, who agreed not to oppose the
Constitution further, many federalists reversed their opposition to a bill of
rights in order to entice the remaining states to ratify. On June 8, 1789, in
the newly formed U.S. House of Representatives, James Madison proposed a bill of
rights that included the following:

The right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed; a well
armed, and well regulated militia being the best security of a free country:
but no person religiously scrupulous of bearing arms shall be compelled to
render military service in person. [100]

Coxe was in an excellent position to know what Congress was doing; he was living in
New York City (where the first Congress was meeting) and was serving as an
unofficial policy advisor to several leading congressmen. [101]
In this capacity, he *367helped shape the Judiciary Act of 1789, which created the lower federal
courts; legislation regarding the President's power to remove his appointees;
and the patent bill. [102]

Perhaps
alerted to Madison's proposals in advance of the general public, within ten days
"A Pennsylvanian" again appeared in print, this time in the
Philadelphia Federal Gazette with his Remarks on the First Part of the
Amendments to the Federal Constitution. [103] Probably
the most comprehensive section-by-section exposition on the Bill of Rights to be
published during its ratification period, Coxe's Remarks included the following:

As civil rulers, not having their duty to the people, duly before them, may
attempt to tyrannize, and as the military forces which shall be occasionally
raised to defend our country, might pervert their power to the injury of their
fellow-citizens, the people are confirmed by the next article in their right
to keep and bear their private arms. [104]

Coxe sent a copy of his essay to Madison along with a letter of the same date. [105]
Madison wrote back acknowledging "Your favor of the 18th instant. The
printed remarks inclosed in it are already I find in the Gazettes here New York
." [106] Madison added approvingly that ratification
of the amendments "will however be greatly favored by explanatory
strictures of a healing tendency, and is therefore already indebted to the
co-operation of your pen." [107]

Madison apparently saw Coxe's defense of the amendments in the New York Packet the day
before he wrote to Coxe. [108] The Coxe article also was
displayed prominently on the first page of the July 4th celebration issue of the
Massachusetts Centinel, [109] and was no doubt reprinted
elsewhere. Just as Coxe had written energetically for the proposed Constitution,
he now wrote with the same vigor for the proposed Bill of Rights. [110]

*368

II. Coxe's Service in the Washington and Adams Administrations and the Election of 1800

In 1790, Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton appointed Coxe as the Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury, making him Hamilton's second in command. Two years
later, and at Coxe's request, Hamilton made Coxe the Commissioner of the
Revenue. [111]

As Commissioner of the Revenue, Coxe was in charge of the collection of all tax
revenues, including the revenues from the Hamilton-inspired federal excise tax
on distilled spirits, which prompted the 1794 Whiskey Rebellion in western *369Pennsylvania. [112] While there is no evidence that
Coxe personally supported the tax-which bore unfairly on western farmers in
general and on his state of Pennsylvania in particular (because farmers needed
to distill their grain before taking it to market, in order to make it more
compact and, thus, transportable)-Coxe strongly opposed the western Pennsylvania
farmers taking up arms in protest against the excise tax. [113]

Critics of the individual rights interpretation of the Second Amendment sometimes claim
that the Standard Model implies that people can go to war with the government
whenever they disagree with any government decision, such as an unpopular tax
increase. [114] Coxe refutes this claim. Coxe clearly
believed in the individual right to arms, and he just as clearly believed that
it was wrong for the Pennsylvania farmers to take up arms against a lawful tax
that had been duly created through proper constitutional methods. [115]
Coxe would continue to support the right to arms as a mechanism allowing popular
revolt as a last resort against tyranny-but Coxe, like the vast majority of
Americans, could tell the difference between a tyrant and George Washington.
Today, when federal taxes are much higher than the taxes that sparked the
Whiskey Rebellion, the vast majority of Americans, including those who support
Coxe's understanding of the Second Amendment, agree that a tax constitutionally
imposed by Congress is no grounds for a Second Amendment revolution to rescue
the Constitution from tyranny.

While serving President Washington's administration, Coxe wrote a major book analyzing
the future of the American economy: A View of the United States of America. [116]
The book was a leading work of the time on commerce, industry, and agriculture, [117]
and has earned a modern reprint because of its comprehensive and insightful
examination of American economic development. Coxe was the first American
economist to foresee the immense economic potential of cotton culture in *370the United States. [118] He also observed that
"Manufactures of iron form a very increasing and useful branch ...
including arms of various kinds." [119] He noted:
"The Indian War and the renewal of our militia system has greatly revived
the manufacture of arms." [120] Coxe argued that
gunpowder already was being manufactured in several places more cheaply than it
could be imported: [121] "The manufacture of
gunpowder has advanced with the greatest rapidity to the point of desire in
regard both to quantity and quality." [122] In an
economic analysis written in 1789, Coxe urged moderate protection for a variety
of essential domestic industries, including firearms and gunpowder, [123]
but the industries apparently were improving without need for much protection. [124]

*371Coxe's growing alignment with Thomas Jefferson and other Republicans led to
his dismissal from office by President John Adams in 1797. [125]
Coxe then plunged into political activity supportive of the Republican cause, [126]
adherents of which claimed to be suffering repression under the Sedition Act
within a year. [127]

Coxe closely associated himself with the Philadelphia Aurora, the leading
Jeffersonian newspaper of the time. [128] By mid-1799,
according to accounts in this paper, armed conflict between Federalists and
Republicans threatened. The Aurora published reports of bullying, weapons
brandishing, and rioting by soldiers in the Federalist faction. [129]
In retaliation, a mob of "federal savages" attacked and beat Aurora
editor William Duane. [130] As a consequence of the mob's
threat to destroy the press, "a number of republican citizens collected
with arms and ammunition, continue to mount guard in the Printing-Office." [131]

The same issue of the Aurora which included this report, also included an article
signed by Tench Coxe and an urgent appeal by "Mentor" addressed
"To the Republican Citizens of Pennsylvania." [132]
The article vividly expressed the premises upon which Republican doctrine
rested:

But as men intent upon hostility have associated themselves in military corps, it
becomes your duty to associate likewise-Arm and organize yourselves
immediately ....Do you wish to preserve your rights? Arm yourselves-Do you desire to
secure your dwellings? Arm yourselves-Do you wish your wives and daughters
protected? Arm yourselves-Do you wish to be defended against assassins or the
Bully Rocks of faction? Arm yourselves-Do you desire to assemble in security
to consult for your own good or the good of your country? Arm yourselves.-To
arms, to arms, and you may then sit down contented, each man under his own
vine and his own fig-tree and have no one to make him afraid....
If you are desirous to counteract a design pregnant with misery and ruin, then
arm yourselves; for in a firm, imposing and dignified attitude, will consist
your own security and that of your families-To arms, then to arms. [133]

Subsequent issues of the Aurora charged that newspaper offices were being attacked around
the country wherever Federalists were losing elections. [134]
The paper portrayed the riot, the attack on Duane, and President Adams's
dismissal of Tench Coxe as elements of a Federalist conspiracy to institute
monarchy. [135] Finally, the Adams administration had
Duane arrested for seditious libel for publishing a letter Adams (while Vice
President) wrote to Coxe which admitted British influence in the government. [136]
Duane was vindicated, and the Federalists were embarrassed, when he offered to
produce the authentic letter. [137]

The Alien and Sedition Acts and other Federalist transgressions were not the only
aspects of the administration of John Adams that the Republicans attacked in the
election campaign of 1800. Tench Coxe and other supporters of Jefferson
emphasized that the monarchical tendencies of Adams also were exemplified in his
neglect of the militia and support for a standing army.

Writing "To the American People" under the pen-name "Humanus," Coxe
decried "the substantiation of a hired army, and of rich armed townsmen and
partymen, under the cloak of volunteers, for the general constitutional
militia." [138] Coxe devoted an entire section of
the lengthy article to the topic of " volunteers, liable to be passed
through the Strainers of party, substituted for the constitutional
Militia." [139] Coxe pointed out that just before
the militia law of June 1797 expired, Congress passed the Act of May 28, 1798,
"authorizing the President to accept any *373number of Volunteer Corps." [140] The subsequent
Act of March 1799 limited the number of authorized volunteers to 75,000; still
too large a number for Coxe. [141]

Coxe described Federalist objectives in these terms: "The proposed and ordinary
arming and equipment of the militia, could thus, by law, be avoided, omitted, or
postponed, and the same arms, accouterments, and cannon could be applied at the
discretion of the Executive, to the equipment of those Volunteer Corps." [142]
Thus, the constitutional militia of all the armed people would be superseded
with the following inevitable result:

A well-armed Party-corps of 75,000 men, and tens of thousands of hired army, on
the one hand; and a neglected, disused, and un-armed militia, on the other.
The militia includes all the owners of all the property of the state, and are
its sure defenders. [143]

Coxe enunciated similar sentiments in further articles, [144]
and in a major series sought to demonstrate the alleged support of John Adams
for a hereditary president. [145] While Coxe's analysis
correctly stated the American preference for an *374armed people over a standing armed elite, it cited no specific writing of
John Adams which denied the right of the people to keep and bear arms. To the
contrary, Adams was, and would remain, a supporter of the private possession of
arms and of a universal militia. [146

III. Arming the Militia: Coxe in the Jefferson and Madison Administration

Coxe had first met Thomas Jefferson in 1790, when introduced by Benjamin Rush. [147]
Thereafter, Coxe served as an unofficial economic advisor to Jefferson, and
helped the secretary of state prepare reports to Congress about America's
international commerce. [148] Having written so
assiduously on behalf of Jefferson in the 1800 election, Coxe began angling for
a position in the Jefferson administration. [149] But
Coxe did not succeed until 1803, when President Jefferson-at the recommendation
of Secretary of Treasury Albert Gallatin, himself a former arms manufacturer [150]-
appointed Coxe as purveyor of public supplies. [151] *375Coxe held the post through the rest of the Jefferson administration, and for
the first four years of Madison administration, including the opening months of
the War of 1812. [152]

Aside from political considerations of gratitude for Coxe's work in opposition to
Adams in the election of 1800, the selection of Coxe as the head of military
procurement stemmed from both his experience as a merchant and his political
commitment to the militia as the defense of a free society. [153]
Halving the size of the standing army and arming the militias were important
objectives of the Jefferson administration. [154]

Even as Jefferson was attempting to shrink the standing army, the Napoleonic wars in
Europe had created a constant foreign policy crisis for the United States. Under
the Adams administration, the United States nearly had gone to war with France,
and certainly would have done so if a hawk like Alexander Hamilton, rather than
a steady statesman like John Adams, had been president. As purveyor of public
supplies, Coxe was responsible for procuring arms for both the standing army and
the militia during years when war and foreign invasion were a constant threat [155]-a
threat that materialized in 1812. [156]

*376

A. Coxe's Concept of Federal Arms Policy for the Militia

The arming of the militia was the subject of an opinion Coxe included in a letter
written to President Jefferson in January 1807. [157]
Coxe began by reviewing the militarization of Europe which stemmed from the
struggle by hierarchies and aristocracies against revolutionary, late
Napoleonic, France. [158] The republican principles that
threatened European powers originated in America:

In the long course of stupendous events from the time of the meeting of the
notables in 1788 [159] to the present day, the United
States of America have been wonderfully preserved from actual war, and
political and civil injury. But it is a manifest and solemn truth, that the
vital principles of our constitutions were the incipient causes of these
conflicts, and that they were unceasing objects of the fears, resentments, and
hatreds of all the crowns, aristocracies, and hierarchies as well among the
vanquished as the victors. [160]

It was "an immense collection of powerful military despotisms, covering the
face of the transatlantic world" that threatened the infant states in
America. [161] Yet, a potential invader would pay dearly
in any attempt to subjugate the land, particularly if more stress was laid on
arming the people:

Tis to implements of war that we should turn our attention, our exertions and our
funds to ensure and complete our means of defense.

The free people of these states may be estimated at five millions. The men able to
bear arms may be computed at one million. It is respectfully believed and it is
most anxiously suggested that measures for the immediate acquisition by
purchase, importation and manufacture of muskets, rifles and pistols to arm our
one million of effective free men ... should be taken into consideration. [162]

*377

Coxe went on to recommend that arms and/or funds should be offered to the
more vulnerable states, to enable "our governments to arm every free man,
who has personal rights or property to watch, maintain and defend." [163]
This would deter any potential aggressor from attack:

To encounter a nation of 5 or 6 millions of armed free men ... would be a
conflict unpromising of any kind or degree of real advantage .... In short, it
is confidently believed, that completely armed-duly temperate-and reasonably
just, we may rely, under Heaven, on the preservation of our accustomed peace,
our liberty and our safety. [164]

Jefferson thanked Coxe for his useful ideas: "Your idea of providing as many arms as
we have fighting men is undoubtedly a sound one." [165]
It was a matter that should be impressed upon the Congress, which moved slowly,
Jefferson thought.

[Only] the session before last I proposed to them ... that every man should receive a
stand of arms [166] the first year he entered the
militia. This would have required 20,000 stands a year and in a few years
would have armed the whole besides the stock in the public arsenals .... [167]

The President believed that the measure would prevail eventually. Private and
public manufacture could produce "40,000 stand of arms a year but they come
so much dearer than the imported of equal quality." [168]
In any event, the European governments were too busy fighting each other to
invade republican America. [169]
During the same period, Coxe published his Thoughts on the Subject of Naval
Power, which further clarified the superiority of the militia over standing land
and sea forces. [170] A primary objection to a large
fleet was that impressment might be resorted to:

*378

Will the seamen of the United States submit to a civil regimen in this
case, like that of Great Britain? Will the rest of the people of this country
consent to such an example of coercion and limitation of wages? ... It may be
fairly and prudently asked, [w]hether a standing naval establishment is not
liable to a large proportion of the objections to a standing army .... [171]

The second part of the same work stressed the superiority of the armed people over
standing establishments for defense consistent with freedom. [172]
In some respects, a naval power may be more difficult to check than a land force
and, besides, would produce wars through foreign contacts:

When the United States determined to avoid the expenses and dangers of "a
standing army," they found in the rights and habits of the chase and of
arms, and in their universal militia, adequate and safe means of suppressing
insurrection and repelling invasion. They did not desire an army for ambitious
wars.... Even in the season of war we have believed, that a proper
establishment of the militia will be indispensable to counterbalance the
weight of the army.
... If we should create a powerful fleet, it will not be controllable by the
militia, who never can have ships on their establishment. [173]

Here Coxe sounded a theme that already had been stated strongly in the Pennsylvania
Constitution [174] by Pennsylvania Patriots during the
Revolution, [175] and in the minority report from the
Pennsylvania ratifying convention: [176] the close
connection between "the rights and habits of the chase and of arms,"
and the "universal militia," as elements ensuring "adequate and
safe means of suppressing insurrection and repelling invasion." [177]
Coxe would develop the issue at much greater length later in his career, in his
critiques of the British and French game laws. [178]

*379

Not only would the lack of a strong navy decrease foreign friction and
diminish the possibility of oppression, but properly armed citizens were fully
capable of defending the ports:

It is submitted, therefore, whether if the 10 or 1,200,000 men, able to bear arms
in the United States, were provided with depots of every useful and necessary
species of arms from large cannon and heavy mortars to musquets, pistols, and
swords, at and around our sea ports, they would not prove a more effectual bar
to any considerable mischief in our ports, than the limited navy, which is so
ardently desired. [179]

Coxe provided President Jefferson with his manuscript on naval policy, and the
President replied: "I have read with great satisfaction your observations
on the principles for equalizing the power of the different nations on the sea,
and think them perfectly sound." [180]

B. Coxe's Role in Arming the Militias

In 1807 and 1808, Congress finally passed legislation to arm the militia, providing
an annual appropriation "for the purpose of providing arms and military
equipment for the whole body of the militia of the United States, either by
purchase or manufacture." [181] The arms were to be
transmitted to the states for distribution to *380their militias. [182] The federal armories in
Springfield, Massachusetts, and Harper's Ferry, Virginia were not capable of
meeting the production demands of Congress. [183] In
administering the program, Coxe contracted with and made monetary advances to
private arms manufacturers. [184] This system of
government patronage greatly advanced the development of small arms making from
a handicraft to a modern industry, in part by promoting the development of
interchangeable parts. [185]

Today, critics of the Standard Model individual rights view of the Second Amendment
sometimes point to government efforts to arm the militia, and argue that,
because the government supplied some militia forces with arms, the right to keep
and bear arms must not be a right of individuals. [186]
But this view is incoherent on its face. Just because the government today gives
people things to read, such as the vast output of books from the Government
Printing Office, does not mean that individuals do not have a right to read
other books of their own choosing. This principle would still be true even if
the government ordered the people to read certain books considered essential to
public service. [187]

Moreover, the anti-individual rights argument ignores the well-known distinction between
"private arms" and "public arms." "Public arms"
were supplied by the government to persons for public use-for militia service.
Public arms might at some point have to be returned to the government. [188]
"Private arms" were firearms (or *381swords) owned by individuals; individuals could use them for militia
service, and a person with his own private arms would not need the charity of
public arms. The distinction between the two types of arms was set forth in the
1823 Return of the Adjutant General of the enrolled militia in Pennsylvania,
which contained an inventory of the supply of arms (of all types) available for
militia use. [189] The editor of the Democratic Press
described the Return in these words:

Our stock of Public Arms are respectable but it is still more gratifying to
observe the number of Private Arms returned. There are no less than twelve
thousand six hundred and seventy-eight Rifles reported as private property,
and two thousand and thirty-eight public rifles .... Sharp Shooting, Good
Marksmanship, is eminently a trait in the American Character .... [190]

Explaining the Second Amendment, Tench Coxe, the great purveyor of public arms,
had written in 1789 that "the people are confirmed by the next article in
their right to keep and bear their private arms." [191]
Public arms certainly could help achieve the Second Amendment's goal of a
well-regulated militia; depending on the wealth of the people of any given
region, the number of public arms donated in order to supply the militia fully
might exceed the number of private arms brought to militia service. The donation
of public arms, however, hardly negated the right to keep and bear "private
arms."

For Coxe, the 1808 Act was an ideal opportunity to use federal resources to help
build a strong domestic firearms industry. Coxe's letters to Secretary of War
William Eustis set forth the relation between the industry and an armed
populace. [192] To defeat a standing army, a populace
must be well armed:

*382

No part of Europe will permit us to obtain arms from them.... A general
armament for the purpose of a general stand is a measure ... worthy of
consideration. The omnipresence of the public force is the consequence of a
general armament. The skill of modern regular armies require the mass of the
population to be equipped for resisting the potent invaders of this time. [193]

Sales of arms to the public would not only arm them, but would also generate industry
advances:

A decided tone, a good inspection, good patterns and in short much care, pains
and vigilance are necessary to procure substantial Arms from public &
private Armories. If sales to the Militia & private persons [&] to
ships should at any time be desired and practicable, it would keep up the
manufacture and enable us to improve the standard quality. [194]

Coxe proposed the sale of 10,000 muskets, rifles, pistols, and swords. [195]
The Jeffersonian promotion of the firearms industry represented a return to the
values of the Revolution, according to Coxe:

The manufacture of Arms was dormant at the time of the first operations for
rifles, pistols and swords. Same had been since the War till the end of Adams'
presidency. The private arms makers were generally discontinued for regular
Military use. We had to revive them. [196]

In a circular to contracting gunsmiths, Coxe emphasized: "The importance of
good arms is manifest.... The lives of our fellow citizens, to whom the use of
them is committed, depend upon the excellence of their arms." [197]
In his correspondence with manufacturers and inspectors, Coxe demonstrated great
technical expertise in *383the design and manufacture of muskets, rifles, pistols, and swords. [198]
But despite Coxe's expertise and dedication, the public arms program ran into
trouble.

C. The Quality Controversy

Coxe's small office was overwhelmed by the procurement needs of the militia and the
rapidly expanding standing army as tensions with Great Britain increased.
Despite working seven days and nights a week, he still had to bring in his adult
sons as unpaid assistants. [199] In 1810, Coxe fired the
inspector in charge of quality control for the arms being acquired. [200]
In a series of articles published in early 1811, Coxe's former Pennsylvania
political associate, William Duane, charged that Purveyor Coxe had accepted
large quantities of inferior firearms. [201] In his first
article, Duane made the sweeping allegation "that arms we had seen, which
had been manufactured for the MONEY (for we cannot say the use) of the United
States, were better adapted to kill American soldiers into whose hands they
should be put, than an enemy." [202] Coxe rejoined
in the same issue, flatly denying the charges and noting that all arms were
inspected prior to payment. [203] Besides, the purveyor
was not an inspector:

It is impossible for the purveyor to be present at the inspections, which take
place at various work shops, and public stores from Culpeper, in Virginia, to
Exeter in New Hampshire .... There are probably sixty contractors, who have
delivered arms .... [204]

*384

In subsequent installments, Duane relied on averments of the former
inspector who was discharged for incompetence. Duane claimed that some rifle
barrels lacked grooves (rifling), had grooves only six inches down the barrel,
or had grooves that were too shallow. [205] Some were
made with unfit Dutch locks (firing systems), or had stocks filled with glue and
sawdust. [206] There were Hessian or Hanoverian arms
(German imports) which needed inspecting. "There were nine hundred pairs of
pistols, but not one pair fit for public service." [207]
Duane did not provide any further details. [208]

In a series of articles addressed To the Public, Coxe responded to "the late
unfounded attack upon the public muskets and private manufacturers of of muskets
for the United States." [209] The muskets, rifles,
and pistols in question were the equivalent of any manufactured in this country.
Coxe stated that, thanks to the federal procurement program, the number of
private armorers had increased ten-fold in just a few years. [210]
Now, " t he rifle and pistol makers were constantly sending in arms,"
much to the purveyor's dismay. [211] Coxe urged the
appointment of a rifle inspector, "as there is not a pattern rifle, to
govern the workmen as in the case of the pistol." [212]

In the second installment of To the Public, Coxe claimed that he upheld "a
strict and rigorous inspection, according to my rifle and pistol contracts; also
a minute inspection 'in all parts' viz.: The riffling, the breechpins, the
interior of the locks, & c." [213] Coxe's
knowledge of firearms was from the perspective of a merchant, not an inspector,
but he defended his discharge of the unqualified inspector. [214]
The purveyor denied "the passing of one bad stand of arms or pair of
pistols, by him." [215]

In Coxe's third article, he answered the charge that the American muskets were
adopted "to kill American soldiers" with the fact that not a single
musket had been proven bad. [216] Further, "the
present inspector in this department has given a recent opinion in favor of the
American muskets." [217]

*385

The fourth and final article of the series is filled with details about
American pistol and rifle manufacture during that epoch. [218]
The purveyor had encountered numerous problems in implementing the
standardization of firearms among manufacturers. [219] In
that article, Coxe listed some of the firearms makers from whom he had procured
weapons; [220] most of whom were prominent manufacturers
who produced both for state militia contracts and for the private market. [221]
While defending his record, Coxe admitted the need for both technological and
inspection improvements. [222]

*386

Months passed without further public controversy, but at the end of 1811,
Duane renewed "The Military Establishment" series. [223]
Duane insinuated that in America there were those who placed "a military
force before its enemy with saw dust cartridges or balls too large for the
calibre, or with rifles without touchholes, [224] and
without spiral grooves, and of which 8 out of 18 burst on the proof with powder
only of 135, whilst the true proof should be of the standard of 150." [225]

Coxe retorted in early 1812 with a broadside To the Public, which was distributed in
Congress. [226] Coxe defended the particulars of the
situation, [227] and then *387Duane fired back. [228] Although Coxe responded, [229]
he was not out of political trouble. Starting in 1810, his enemies in Congress,
who were allies of Duane's faction in Pennsylvania Republican politics, had
begun attempting to abolish the purveyorship. [230]

The Duane dispute quieted down, and Coxe continued the course of his work,
soliciting "Home Made and Other Supplies," including "Muskets,
Pistols, Rifles and Swords." [231] The outbreak of
the War of 1812 in June of that year, however, occasioned a military
reorganization, giving Coxe's congressional opponents the opportunity to
eliminate the office of purveyor of public supplies by replacing it with a
quartermaster's department. [232]

D. Coxe's Examination of the State of the American Firearms Industry

Despite relieving Coxe from the purveyor's office, the Madison administration continued
to appreciate Coxe's talents. Madison appointed Coxe to the post of collector
and supervisor of the revenue in Philadelphia. [233] Coxe
eventually left this position for the larger salary of clerk of the Court of
General Quarter Sessions for Philadelphia, a post he held until his retirement
in 1818. [234] Coxe's most important contribution came at
the request of Treasury Secretary Albert Gallatin, who assigned Coxe to analyze
the condition of industry in the republic. [235]

While concerned with economic development of all types, Coxe devoted some attention to
the area of firearms. His Statement of the Arts and Manufacturers of the United
States of America, transmitted by President Madison to the Congress in 1814,
included discussion of the arms industry. [236] Under the
topic "Defence," Coxe noted *388federal efforts both to restrain the export of arms [237]
and to encourage their domestic manufacture. [238] In
addition to the establishment of state and federal armories, contracts with
monetary advances assisted the private manufacture of cannon, firearms, and
swords. [239] Noting "very considerable attention to
the repair and manufacture of arms" in the past twenty years, Coxe
predicted "no irremovable obstacle to the manufacture of every species of
arms ... of good qualities, and in sufficient quantities." [240]
The tremendous progress in firearms and other military manufacture seemed to
Coxe to be the greatest success story of American industry since 1775. [241]

In another part of the Statement, Coxe analyzed technological developments in the
manufacture of cannon and muskets: [242] "Cannon are
constantly manufactured, when demanded, to a very considerable extent, in the
public armories of the nation, and of the States, and on contracts, and for sale
to associations of citizens, and to individual purchasers, for use at home, or
for exportation." [243] That cannon were marketed to
the citizens is an interesting revelation given Coxe's prediction in 1787 that
the armed populace would be more powerful than a standing army. [244]
While noting improvements in the manufacture of small arms, Coxe advocated
"a judicious and rigorous inspection" of military arms and pistols
"to prevent deception, and its most evil consequences." [245]
Perhaps William Duane had been right in his allegations concerning the poor
quality of some contract arms. The problems with Coxe's public arms program
illustrated, indirectly, the wisdom of the Second Amendment's protection of the
possession of private arms as one means of arming the militia: A citizen buying
a single firearm for his own use may be more likely to inspect the firearm in
detail, and less likely to accept a poor quality firearm than a federal
government inspector charged with inspecting hundreds of firearms. After all,
the

*389

inspector would not be using the firearms to defend his own life. The
quality control advantage of citizens obtaining private arms individually may
have outweighed the standardization advantages of mass procurement of public
arms. [246]

IV. Firearms, Game Laws, and Monarchy

Coxe retired in 1818 after having served three years as clerk of the Quarter Sessions
in Philadelphia; he spent his remaining years as a writer. Coxe continued to
correspond with Madison and his other political friends. [247]
Jefferson, who had found Coxe's self-promotion to be offensively blunt while he
was President, reconciled himself to Coxe's personality flaws, and lauded Coxe
as "'a long tried public and personal friend' and 'a fellow laborer,
indeed, in times never to be forgotten."' [248] Coxe
also continued to write prolifically for public consumption, often on matters
involving the right to bear arms. [249] During his
retirement years, *390Coxe was energized particularly by his opposition to the presidential
ambitions of John Quincy Adams and by Adams's support of restrictive European
laws regarding gun ownership for hunting. [250] Coxe
argued in detail that Adams's position undermined the entire right to keep and
bear arms, and thereby threatened republican government. [251]

Coxe's first retirement writing about firearms was Considerations Respecting the Helots
[252] of the United States, African and Indian, under the
pen- name "A Democratic Federalist." [253] In
the first installment, Coxe noted that Pennsylvania excluded free Blacks from
"the right to enter militia and to partake of public arms," and that
the states "deny them the use of the public arms." [254]
In contrast with the term "private arms," which Coxe used in
discussing the Second Amendment when it was proposed in 1789, [255]
"public arms" meant arms supplied by and returnable to the state, such
as the arms that Coxe had provided as purveyor of public supplies. In 1820,
Pennsylvania did not prohibit free blacks from having private arms for personal
use, but did prohibit them from using public arms which were issued to some
members of the militia. While all free whites were militia members, public arms
likely were issued either to those who could not afford them, or to groups that
trained together and wished to have arms with a common bore. [256]
In some states, free Blacks were entitled only to private arms, while in
others-particularly in the South where the rights of free Blacks gradually were
constricted during the antebellum years-to neither private nor public arms. [257]
In the eighth installment of the series on the "Helots," Coxe noted
the fears of the opponents of "the day when a million and a half of black
people, generally in the state of the untutored Africans, were to be made free
in power, election, arms, civil, and religious combination." [258]
*391Abolitionist Coxe was quite accurate in recognizing the fears of opponents
of civil rights for Blacks. In the Dred Scott case, [259]
Chief Justice Taney insisted in the majority opinion that free Blacks could not
be citizens because, if they were, they would have "the full liberty of
speech in public and in private upon all subjects which a state's own citizens
might speak; to hold public meetings upon political affairs, and to keep and
carry arms wherever they went." [260]

Coxe's last writings on the subject of the armed populace were his most extensive.
Penned in opposition to John Quincy Adam's bid for election as president, Coxe's
final testament revived a 1791 debate between John Quincy Adams and Thomas
Paine. [261] A review of the 1791 debates about arms and
game laws clarifies the context of Coxe's polemics of 1823.

One of the chief impediments to the dissolution of the monarchy in France in 1789
was centuries of weapons prohibitions. [262] In the 1791
bestseller, The Rights of Man, [263] which appeared when
state legislatures still were debating the Bill of Rights in America, Thomas
Paine described the situation just hours prior to the storming of the Bastille:

The
event was to be freedom or slavery. On one side, an army of nearly thirty
thousand men; on the other, an unarmed body of citizens; for the citizens of
Paris, on whom the National Assembly must then immediately depend, were as
unarmed and as undisciplined as the citizens of London are now.
....
Arms they had none, nor scarcely anyone who knew the use of them; but
desperate resolution, when every hope is at stake, supplies, for a while, the
want of arms. Near where the Prince de Lambesc was drawn up, were large piles
of stones collected for building the new bridge, and with these the people
attacked the cavalry.
... The night was spent in providing themselves with every sort of weapon they
could make or procure: Guns, swords, blacksmiths' hammers, carpenters' axes,
iron crows, pikes, halberts, pitchforks, spits, clubs, etc., etc. [264]

*392The French people were victorious and quickly adopted a Declaration of
Rights and a Constitution (although the people proved unable to maintain a
stable and free government). As Paine noted, the new French republic's abolition
of the game laws was the embodiment of free trade:

The
French constitution says, there shall be no game laws, that the farmer on
whose lands wild game shall be found (for it is by the produce of this lands
they are fed) shall have a right to what he can take; that there shall be no
monopolies of any kind-that all trade shall be free ....
... In England, game is made the property of those at whose expense it is not
fed .... Is this freedom? [265]

John
Quincy Adams attacked Paine's work in his anonymous Letters of Publicola, which
defended the Constitution of England, including that nation's right "to
establish a Government in hereditary succession" [266]
and Parliament's right to enact game laws. [267] Adams
severely castigated Paine's defense of the French Constitution, which placed
beyond legislative control "universal freedom of the chase." [268]
The letters originally were thought to have been penned by John Adams, who had
defended the British Constitution in his Defence of the Constitutions [269]
and Discourses on Davila, [270] the latter of which
attacked the French Revolution. [271]

At
last, in 1823, John Quincy Adams revealed his own authorship of the Letters of
Publicola and renewed his criticism of "the inflammatory principles of
Paine," whose works he called "worse than worthless." [272]
Tench Coxe cited all of the above writings of the Adams and others as reflective
of dangerous monarchical tendencies, which John Quincy Adams would represent if
elected president. Under the pen-name "Sidney," Coxe also wrote an
1823 series entitled To the Friends of the Principles of the Constitution of the
United States in the Philadelphia Democratic Press. [273]
In *393this series, Coxe criticized monarchical sympathizers in America, with
particular reference to John Quincy Adams, including Adams's views about the
deprivation of arms in France and England. [274]

In
pre-revolutionary France, Coxe recalled:

not
only were the commons or people of the third estate deprived of the ownership,
possession and use of arms, but they were bound to leave their farming works
at the command of the lord, in order to surround forests, and to keep therein,
game which their Lord was about to hunt for sport. [275]

Coxe
noted that Thomas Paine, in The Rights of Man, had "commended the repeal of
the system and provisions of the hunting laws which had debased the people of
France below the beasts of the fields, [and] held the commons or third estate in
the ignorance and privation or non-possession of arms." [276]
Under the forest and game laws of England, continued Coxe, "the people, the
body of the commons, the inefficient 199 two hundredth parts are deprived of the
right to own, keep and use arms. It is, Blackstone says, 'a tyranny,' and a
Fatal tyranny on the commons of England." [277]

Coxe
depicted John Adams and John Quincy Adams as apologists of the French and
English game laws and, thus, as "opposed to the Liberties of France,
England and the United States, on the all important subject of the militia, and
its precious emanation, our real volunteer companies." [278]
Like the British dictator Oliver Cromwell, President John Adams had increased
the regular army and sought to dispense with the militia. An unarmed people
could mean a monarchy in America, Coxe concluded: "Without a free
omnipresent constitutional militia army unstrangled by game laws, ... a
president could be quickly authorized to continue for life, and the office could
be made to run in the persons of his sons ...." [279]

In
the next serial, "Sidney" faulted the Adamses for their defense of the
British constitution:

We
proceed from the total destruction or rather prevention of the right to own
and keep and use arms and consequently of self-defense and of the public
militia power or force, the army of the constitutions of the United States,
stated in our last number, to the still more precious object of the right of
conscience. [280]

*394For John Quincy Adams, charged Coxe, England's establishment of one church,
coupled with "a deprivation of the ownership and use of arms, and other
abuses of a like nature" were not sufficient to justify the calling of a
convention by the people to change the British constitution. [281]

British
impressment of sailors, which to Coxe was "personal, though not hereditary,
slavery," was the subject of Coxe's following article. [282]
"Coerced service" was anathema to American freedom, which instead
depended on self-armed volunteers:

A
western or southern volunteer militia officer or private, who had served, ...
in the battles of Orleans ..., would illy brook the application to his person,
of the British institution of sailors impressment, transferred into the
constitution and practice of the United States, by the rapturous, or
indiscriminate admirers and defenders of the constitution of England. [283]

Serving
as secretary of state under President Monroe, John Quincy Adams stood on the
traditional stepping-stone to the presidency-which Adams, in fact, would win in
1824-and so Coxe continued his anti-Adams articles. Written under the pen-name
"Sherman," Coxe's most comprehensive analysis of the deprivation of
the right to have and use arms was published as an address "To the People
of the United States." [284] Again, the thrust of
the article was the manner in which the game laws disarmed the commoners in
England and France. [285] Coxe's purpose was to show the
monarchical inclinations of John Quincy Adams in Adams' attacks on Thomas Paine.

Coxe
began by reviewing the feudal oppressions of the rights of the chase in France,
and Paine's praise for their abolition at the time of the revolution:

Mr.
Paine's approbation of this humane, wise and liberal act (tho it is certain they
put the right of the chase and of arms on nearly the same footing as ourselves
in our constitutions) is among the specified grounds of Mr. Adams, junior, reply
of 1791, to the rights of man .... [286]

*395Coxe then analyzed the impact of England's game laws in 1791:

No
man of less freehold estate than about 433 Dollars per Annum may own, keep and
use a gun or engine to kill any of the wild beasts or birds, called game, on
his own land. It is easy to see, that this game law deprives the great body of
the people of England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland of all knowledge in the
construction, use, care and value of arms; unfits them for the militia, gives
undue weight to the army, navy, ... and other legalized forces, and to the
armed and privileged nobility and gentry. [287]

Coxe's
belief that the game laws of England had been used to disarm the English
populace was shared widely in America; statements to that effect can be found in
the three leading constitutional law treatises of the antebellum era. [288]
That view, while influential, was wrong. Most Englishmen could not hunt legally,
but they could own guns legally for non-hunting purposes such as personal
defense and target shooting. [289]

*396As Blackstone recognized, the game laws, which were meant to disarm the
people, originated as part of a system of slavery: [290]
"The Rustics or people of the country were every where in Europe forbidden
by the German and Gothic invaders to carry arms." [291]
So too, the ancient Britons, beset by successive conquerors, were "made and
continued disarmed Serfs, Villeins or Slaves." [292]

The
most despotic governments have, for these reasons, the most oppressive and
cruel game laws. They are peculiarly opposite to the free spirit of such
bodies as our American Constitution, the French National Assembly, and the
courts of Spain, Portugal and their late American colonies. His own firearms
are the second and better right hand of every freeman, and Mr. Adams, junior,
has shown an utter disregard of them in this part of his reply to Mr. Paine.

So
prudent, faithful and provident have our people and constitutions been, that
we find in their precious bills of rights, schedules of duties, reasons of
powers, and declarations recognizing the right to own, keep and use arms,
provisions preventing and forbidding the legislatures to interfere with and to
abrogate, that all important right of the citizens. [293]

Coxe
continued, noting that Blackstone wrote that the English game laws were meant
"to disarm the people" and resulted in "a Tyranny to the
Commons." [294] Thus, Adams's opposition to Paine on
the issue of game laws was tantamount to opposing Blackstone:

Why
all this insensibility to the most odious and pernicious part of the regime of
ancient tyranny by which the French unarmed people for many centuries were
held in Chains. Why all this devotion to the ... British Constitution, by
which that distinguished people have been held unarmed, since the kings and
nobles of the Norman race rang the knell of their departed freedom in the
sound of the curfew, sunk their liberties in a base oppressive villeinage, and
riveted their chains by specious game laws, at once disarming them and
tyrannously keeping the commons of England completely ignorant and helpless in
arms. [295]

*397As had been his practice since the Constitution was debated in 1787, Coxe
sent copies of the "Sidney" articles, and possibly the
"Sherman" series, to Madison, and also to Jefferson with explanatory
letters. His purpose was to show how the Adamses, both father and son, labored
"to the same end; the setting up the British, and the undermining the
principles and character of our Constitution." [296]
Neither Madison nor Jefferson was interested in attempting to influence
presidential politics in their retirement years; Jefferson's declining health
left him able to reply to only a few correspondents and, thus, Madison conveyed
to Coxe Jefferson's apology "that it hurt him much to leave unnoticed an
old friend." [297] In the fall of 1823, Coxe was
still sending his articles to Jefferson and Madison. [298]

Tench
Coxe died on July 16, 1824, a few months before John Quincy Adams was elected
president. [299] He predeceased his old friend, Thomas
Jefferson, and his old foe, John Adams, by two years. [300]
While John Quincy Adams was wrong in his underestimation of the pernicious
effect of the European game laws, Coxe was wrong in his estimation of Adams,
whose 1825-1829 presidency was untouched by any trace of monarchy.

Coxe's
retirement writings provide further detail about the scope of the individual
right which Coxe first had elucidated four decades earlier. The right was, of
course, personal, for "His own firearms are the second and better right
hand of every freeman." [301] The duty and the right
of militia service, along with the possible use of public arms, belonged to the
freeman; persons not exercising full civil rights, such as Blacks and Indians,
did not possess the right. Conversely, when the slaves were one day free, they
too would enjoy the full right to arms, like other civil rights.

In
late twentieth-century analysis of the Second Amendment, it is not uncommon to
attempt to break the right to arms into separate units: militia service,
personal *398defense in the home, personal defense in public, defense against tyranny,
hunting, and so forth. The attempt then is made to argue that only one unit, or
only some units, comprise the real right to keep and bear arms, and that
firearms ownership and possession for other purposes is outside the scope of the
Second Amendment. At the most extreme, the argument is that the Second Amendment
only protects the right to keep and bear arms for militia service, which is said
to include only the National Guard. [302] Therefore, only
a National Guardsman has a right to keep and bear arms and, even then, only when
ordered to do so. In a less extreme version, the Second Amendment only addresses
personal defense. [303] Thus, all citizens have a right
to own guns, but none of them have a right to own guns useful for hunting but
not for personal defense.

Coxe's
writings show the error in the cafeteria approach to the Second Amendment: The
right to hunt is integral to the right to own private arms; the right to private
arms is an essential part of both "self-defense" and of the
"public militia power." [304] To be deprived of
arms is, in the long run, to be deprived of a meaningful role in the governance
of the republic. While hunting might, at first, seem to have little to do with
politics, there was a direct connection between anti-gun laws which affected a
personal activity like hunting, and the advent of tyranny. Blackstone made
exactly this point, as did each of the three major American constitutional
treatise writers of antebellum America: Joseph Story, [305]
William Rawle, [306] and St. George Tucker. [307]
Coxe's views on the right to arms were thus securely within the mainstream of
American legal theory.

Conclusion

Tench
Coxe was the leading interpreter of the meaning of the right to keep and bear
arms in the first four decades of the republic. His writings on the Constitution
earned the approval of James Madison, and his services to the young American
republic earned him important positions in the subcabinets of each of America's
first four presidents.

As
is typical in partisan editorializing, Coxe sometimes saw his own position
clearly and failed to understand the complexity or the strength of his
opponents' *399position. Arguing that the armed populace could always over-awe a standing
army, he belittled the anti-federalists for demanding a bill of rights.
Likewise, based on the sympathy of the Adamses for the British Constitution,
Coxe accused them of opposing the militia and the right to keep and bear arms.
Yet, John Adams explicitly endorsed the militia and the right to arms. [308]
While John Quincy Adams and his father might have been wrong for defending the
European game laws, neither Adams ever displayed the slightest hostility towards
the American right to keep and bear arms.

Although
the leaders of the early republic engaged in bitter partisan conflict, there was
no disagreement on the value of the right to keep and bear arms in a free state.
Coxe is recognized today as a leading expositor of federalist doctrine, and his
subsequent career as a public servant and as a political writer supply depth and
nuance to the original understanding of the right to keep and bear arms in the
early republic. [309]

To
Coxe and his contemporaries, the Second Amendment guaranteed the right of every
freeman to own, possess, carry, and use rifles, muskets, pistols, and other
firearms for self-defense, hunting, and militia purposes, including resistance
to oppression. Private arms were constitutionally protected, although uniformity
for militia purposes suggested the wisdom of governmental purchase and
distribution of public arms to the general populace. The right could be injured
by disarmament laws, by over-reliance on standing armies, and by game laws that
prevented individuals from learning how to use arms. Given the centrality of the
right to arms in a free state, the development of the American firearms
manufacturing industry was worthy of national encouragement.

The
individual right to keep and bear arms went unquestioned in the early republic,
but no one championed it as vigorously over such a long span of public service
as did Tench Coxe. The sentiments of the generations that built the Constitution
and the new nation are summarized aptly by Coxe's words written in retirement:
"His own firearms are the second and better right hand of every freeman
...." [310]

Endnotes

[a1]. Attorney at Law, Fairfax, Virginia. Philosophy
Professor at Tuskegee Institute, Howard University, and George Mason University,
1972-1981. J.D., Georgetown University, 1978; Ph.D., Florida State University,
1972. Author of FREEDMEN, THE FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT, AND THE RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS,
1866- 1876 (1998); A RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS: STATE AND FEDERAL BILLS OF RIGHTS AND
CONSTITUTIONAL GUARANTEES (1989); THAT EVERY MAN BE ARMED: THE EVOLUTION OF A
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT (1984).

[aa1]. Adjunct Professor of Law, New York University
School of Law; Research Director, Independence Institute, Golden, Colorado,
http://i2i.org; Associate Policy Analyst, Cato Institute, Washington, D.C.;
J.D., University of Michigan Law School, 1985; B.A., Brown University, 1982.
Author of SUPREME COURT GUN CASES (forthcoming 1999); GUNS: WHO SHOULD HAVE
THEM? (1995); THE SAMURAI, THE MOUNTIE, AND THE COWBOY: SHOULD AMERICA ADOPT THE
GUN CONTROLS OF OTHER DEMOCRACIES? (1992).
The authors would like to thank Paul H. Blackman, Ronald K. Noble, John Reed,
Eugene Volokh, and Timothy Wheeler for helpful comments.

[2]. The Second Amendment provides: "A well regulated
Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the
people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." U.S. Const. amend.
II.

[3]. See, e.g., HAROLD HUTCHESON, TENCH COXE: A STUDY IN
AMERICAN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT 196-97 (1938). As this Article discusses, his
economic vision included what proved to be a very successful effort to develop
the nascent American firearms industry. See infra notes 162-68 and accompanying
text.

[4]. See JACOB E. COOKE, TENCH COXE AND THE EARLY REPUBLIC
286-88 (1978).

[5]. See id. at 109-31; e.g., "A Freeman" (Tench
Coxe), Essays I-III, in FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION: WRITINGS OF THE
"OTHER" FEDERALISTS 1787-1788, at 88-101 (Colleen A. Sheehan &
Gary L. McDowell eds., 1998) [hereinafter FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION]; "An
American Citizen" (Tench Coxe), An Examination of the Constitution of the
United States, in FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION, supra, at 459-76.

[7]. See generally FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION, supra note
5 (presenting a representative collection of writings by Coxe, Dickinson,
Webster, and others explaining and supporting the Constitution). Coxe's papers
are available to the public on microfilm. See LUCY FISHER WEST, GUIDE TO THE
MICROFILM OF THE PAPERS OF TENCH COXE IN THE COXE FAMILY PAPERS AT THE
HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF PENNSYLVANIA Reels 113-14 (1977) [hereinafter PAPERS OF
TENCH COXE] (providing guidance through the extensive collection of papers).

Perhaps
surprisingly, what distinguishes the Second Amendment scholarship from that
relating to other constitutional rights, such as privacy or free speech, is
that there appears to be far more agreement on the general outlines of Second
Amendment theory than exists in those other areas. Indeed, there is sufficient
consensus on many issues that one can properly speak of a "Standard
Model" in Second Amendment theory, much as physicists and cosmologists
speak of a "Standard Model" in terms of the creation and evolution
of the Universe. In both cases, the agreement is not complete: within both
Standard Models are parts that are subject to disagreement. But the overall
framework for analysis, the questions regarded as being clearly resolved, and
those regarded as still open, are all generally agreed upon. This is certainly
the case with regard to Second Amendment scholarship.

Id.

[9]. The following articles that mention Coxe comprise
about a third of the total of "Standard Model" articles published
since 1980: Clayton E. Cramer & David B. Kopel, Shall Issue: The New Wave of
Concealed Handgun Laws, 63 TENN. L. REV. 679 (1995); Anthony J. Dennis, Clearing
the Smoke from the Right to Bear Arms and the Second Amendment,29 AKRON L. REV.
57 (1995); Robert Dowlut, The Right to Arms, 36 OKLA. L. REV. 65 (1983); Robert
Dowlut & Janet A. Knoop, State Constitutions and the Right to Keep and Bear
Arms, 7 OKLA. CITY U. L. REV. 177, 207 n.128 (1982); Frank Espohl, The Right to
Carry Concealed Weapons for Self-defense, 22 S. ILL. U. L.J. 151 (1997); Stephen
P. Halbrook, Encroachments of the Crown on the Liberty of the Subject:
Pre-Revolutionary Origins of the Second Amendment, 15 U. DAYTON L. REV. 91, 121
(1989); Stephen P. Halbrook, Rationing Firearms Purchases And The Right to Keep
Arms: Reflections on The Bills of Rights of Virginia, West Virginia, and The
United States, 96 W. VA. L. REV. 1 (1993); Stephen P. Halbrook, Second-Class
Citizenship and the Second Amendment in the District of Columbia, 5 GEO. MASON
U. CIV. RTS. L.J. 105, 123 (1995); Stephen P. Halbrook, The Jurisprudence of the
Second and Fourteenth Amendments, 4 GEO. MASON L. REV. 1 (1981); Stephen P.
Halbrook, The Right of the People or the Power of the State: Bearing Arms,
Arming Militias, and the Second Amendment, 26 VAL. U. L. REV. 131, 140 (1991);
Stephen P. Halbrook, To Keep and Bear their Private Arms: The Adoption of the
Second Amendment, 1787-1791, 10 N. KY. L. REV. 13, 17, 29-30 (1982); Stephen P.
Halbrook, What the Framers Intended: A Linguistic Analysis of the Right to
"Bear Arms," 49 L. & CONTEMP. PROBS. 151, 155-56 (1986)
[hereinafter Halbrook, what the Framers Intended]; David Hardy, Armed Citizens,
Citizen Armies: Toward a Jurisprudence of the Second Amendment, 9 HARV. J.L.
& PUB. POL'Y 559, 609-10 (1986);;; Don B. Kates, Jr., Handgun Prohibition
and the Original Meaning of the Second Amendment, 82 MICH. L. REV. 204 (1983);
David B. Kopel, Lethal Laws, 15 N.Y.L. SCH. J. INT'L. & COMP. L. 355 (1995)
(book review); Thomas B. McAffee & Michael J. Quinlan, Bringing Forward the
Right to Keep and Bear Arms: Do Text, History, or Precedent Stand in the Way?,
75 N.C. L. REV. 781 (1997); David E. Murley, Private Enforcement of the Social
Contract: Deshaney and the Second Amendment Right to Own Firearms, 36 DUQ. L.
REV. 15 (1997); L.A. Powe, Jr., Guns, Words, and the Constitutional
Interpretation, 38 WM. & MARY L. REV. 1311, 1354-55 (1997); Glenn Harlan
Reynolds, A Critical Guide to the Second Amendment, 62 TENN. L. REV. 461, 467-68
(1995); Robert Shalhope, The Armed Citizen in the Early Republic, 49 LAW &
CONTEMP. PROBS. 125 (1986); Thomas J. Walsh, The Limits and Possibilities of Gun
Control, 23 CAP. U. L. REV. 639 (1994)...
For a complete list of articles in the last decade adopting or contesting the
Standard Model, see David B. Kopel, The Second Amendment in the Nineteenth
Century, 1998 BYU L. REV. 1359, 1362 n.1 (1998).

[13]. See Glenn Harlan Reynolds et al., To Keep and Bear
Arms: An Exchange, N.Y. REV. BOOKS, Nov. 16, 1995, at 61, 62 (quoting "A
Pennsylvanian" (Tench Coxe), FED. GAZETTE (Phila.), June 18, 1789,
reprinted in THE ORIGIN OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT: A DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE
BILL OF RIGHTS IN COMMENTARIES ON LIBERTY, FREE GOVERNMENT AND AN ARMED
POPULACE, 1787-1792, at 670-72 (David E. Young ed., 1995) [hereinafter THE
ORIGIN OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT]).

[15]. See Reynolds et al., supra note 13, at 64. Wills
then called Reynolds's use of Coxe "plain false." Id. Wills's use of
invective rather than reason was unfortunate, but probably would not have
surprised Coxe. Just after the election of 1800, during which Coxe had written
article after article in support of Thomas Jefferson's successful candidacy, the
pro-Federalist Philadelphia Gazette ran a large-type headline-with no supporting
text-which shrieked "TENCH COXE IS INSANE." PHILA. GAZETTE, Dec. 9,
1800, quoted in COOKE, supra note 3, at 381.

[26]. See DANIEL COXE, A DESCRIPTION OF THE ENGLISH
PROVINCE OF CAROLANA, BY THE SPANIARDS CALL'D FLORIDA, AND BY THE FRENCH LA
LOUISIANE (London, Oliver Payne 1722); 4 DICTIONARY OF
AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY, supra note 21, at 485.

[38]. Coxe's uncle by marriage, Chief Justice Edward
Shippen, was a "moderate Loyalist." 17 DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN
BIOGRAPHY, supra note 29, at 116. Coxe's cousin-once-removed, Benedict Arnold,
was a Patriot general and then a traitor. See 1 DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY
362-67 (Allen Johnson ed., 1928).

[41]. See Pa. Const. of 1776, art. I, § 13; id. at art.
II, § 5; art. 3, § 43; see also generally Edward Dumbauld, 1 Am. J. Leg. Hist.
229 (1957) (noting that Pennsylvania protected a right to arms along with a
right to hunt and fish because Pennsylvania usually was careful to preserve
English constitutional precedent). Coxe's criticisms of John Quincy Adams, see
infra notes 171-203 and accompanying text, follow the same
reasoning as a 1776 Patriot article showing the connection between Britain's
restrictive hunting laws and the disarmed British public's reliance on a
standing army:

[T]he
possession of hunting dogs, snares, nets, and other engines by unprivileged
persons [in Britain], has been forbidden, and, under pretense of the last
words, guns have been seized.... [T]his was not legal, as guns are not engines
appropriated to kill game ....
... Thus ... the freeholders of moderate estates [are] deprived of a natural
right. Nor is this all; the body of the people kept from the use of guns are
utterly ignorant of the arms of modern war, and the kingdom effectually
disarmed, except of the standing forces ....

Remarks
on the Resolve, PA. EVENING POST, Nov. 5, 1776, at 2.

[42]. Howe's disarming policies were carried out by Joseph
Galloway, a Pennsylvania Loyalist:
Galloway was requested to recruit his staunchest supporters and assume
responsibility for taking a census of the city. He was instructed to ...
apprehend any residents suspected of being dangerous to the security of the
city, and confiscate any weapons in their possession. He selected personal
henchmen in every ward to conduct the survey and take the necessary action
against the disaffected rebels. JOHN W. JACKSON, WITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN
PHILADELPHIA, 1777-1778, at 20 (1979).

[43]. Philadelphia's Pennsylvania Evening Post reported
that shots were first fired by the British in Lexington when militiamen refused
to obey an officer's command, "Disperse, you rebels, D-N you, throw down
your arms, and disperse ...." PA. EVENING POST, May 11, 1775, at 3. The
opening of hostilities in the countryside provoked British General Gage to
proclaim that the private citizens of Boston, even though not involved in any
way, must deliver their arms to the authorities.

The
Post reported that "[t]he Governor and gentlemen of Boston have agreed to
open the town, on condition of the inhabitants delivering up their arms to the
Selectmen." PA. EVENING POST, May 2, 1775, at 2. The writer added:
"The Governor engages to protect the lives and property of such as choose
to stay. Those who choose to quit the town, to go where they please ...."
Id. After collecting the arms, Gage refused to allow the people to leave Boston.
A writer reported from New London:

By
the post, who left the head quarters at Roxbury, last Monday three o'clock
P.M. we learn that only two persons have been permitted to come out of Boston
that day, that no more of the inhabitants would be permitted to leave the town
for the present; and that on the same day a town meeting was to be held in
Boston, when the inhabitants were determined to demand the arms they had
deposited in the hands of the Selectmen, or have liberty to leave the town.

PA.
EVENING POST, May 20, 1775, at 3.

Meanwhile,
British troops began plundering houses in Boston; and Gage proclaimed martial
law, ordering the Patriots to lay down their arms. See PA. EVENING POST, May 25,
1775, at 2; PA. EVENING POST, June 24, 1775, at 2. The following is a typical
Patriot's response:

What
terms do you hold out in this gracious proclamation? ... Now, Sir, waving all
that may be said of your hypocrisy, cruelty, villany, treachery, perfidy,
falsehood, and inconsistency, are you not ashamed to throw out such an insult
upon human understanding, as to bid people disarm themselves till you and your
butchers murder and plunder them at pleasure! We well know you have orders to
disarm us, and what the disposition of the framers of these orders is, if we
may judge from the past, can be no secret.

E.
Ludlow, To the Vilest Tool of the most profligate and tyrannical Administration
that ever disgraced a Court.
Inhuman
Butcher!, PA. EVENING POST, June 27, 1775, at 1.

An
editorial on Gage's proclamation stressed that an armed populace must keep
government in check:

The
opposing an arbitrary measure, or resisting an illegal force, is no more
rebellion than to refuse obedience to a highway-man who demands your purse, or
to fight a wild beast, that came to devour you. It is morally lawful, in all
limited governments, to resist that force that wants political power, from the
petty constable to the king.... They are rebels who arm against the
constitution, not they who defend it by arms.

[45]. The society was the "first effective reform
organization of its kind in the country." Id. at 92.

[46]. See id. "The bulk of the society's paperwork
was handled by Coxe, who more than any other individual deserved credit for the
accomplishments of the group." Id. at 93. Among the group's accomplishments
were disseminating arguments against slavery to a national audience, assisting
in the formation of anti-slavery societies in other states, providing free legal
aid to free blacks in Pennsylvania and convincing the Pennsylvania Legislature
to pass legislation so severely constricting slavery in Pennsylvania as to put
it on the road to ultimate extinction. See id.

[47]. See id. Franklin also happened to be a very strong
militia enthusiast. As a member of the Pennsylvania Assembly, Franklin wrote the
Militia Act of 1755. See An Act for the Better Ordering and Regulating Such as
are Willing and Desirous to be United for Military Purposes in Pennsylvania
(1755), reprinted in 3 THE WORKS OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN 78 (Jared Sparks ed.,
Boston, Hilliard, Gray, & Co. 1837) [hereinafter THE WORKS OF BENJAMIN
FRANKLIN]. While the Assembly considered the bill, Franklin wrote a lengthy
article touting the militia, which Franklin later credited for having made
possible the bill's passage. See Benjamin Franklin, A Dialogue Between X, Y,
& Z, Concerning the Present State of Affairs in Pennsylvania, reprinted in 3
THE WORKS OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, supra, at 84. After the Royal Governor vetoed a
militia bill in 1764, Franklin wrote a scathing criticism of the governor's
rationale. See "Veritas" (Benjamin Franklin), Remarks on a Particular
Militia Bill Rejected by the Proprietor's Deputy, or Governor, Sept. 28, 1764,
reprinted in 4 THE WORKS OF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, supra, at 95.

[50]. Letter from Richard Warick to Capt. John Stagg (Nov.
13, 1786), in PAPERS OF TENCH COXE, supra note 2, Reel 49, at 556. Subsequent
correspondence indicated this contract was not fulfilled due to insufficient
quantities with the same bore.

"A
stand of arms consists of a musket, bayonet, cartridge-box and belt, with a
sword. But for common soldiers a sword is not necessary." 1 NOAH WEBSTER,
AN AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE 13 (New York, S. Converse 9th ed.
1996) (1828).

Two
decades later, Coxe, as the federal government's purveyor of public supplies,
would make a major effort to standardize militia firearms.

[56]. See Edward C. Walterschied, To Promote Science and
Useful Arts: The Background and Origin of the Intellectual Property Clause of
the United States Constitution, 2 J. Intell. Prop. L., 1, 39-40 (1994).

[57]. See 2 THE DOCUMENTARY HISTORY OF THE RATIFICATION OF
THE CONSTITUTION 128 (M. Jensen ed., 1976) [hereinafter DOCUMENTARY HISTORY].
The convention ended on September 17, 1787.

[70]. Id. at 435. It is interesting that the copy of the
original 1787 edition of An Examination of the Constitution in the Jefferson
Collection at the Library of Congress has this passage and no other marked at
the margin, perhaps by the original reader, Thomas Jefferson. Former President
Jefferson donated his personal library to the Library of Congress after the
British burned the Library during the War of 1812.
The first three installments of An Examination of the Constitution of the United
States appeared in the Philadelphia Independent Gazetteer, on September 26, 28,
and 29, 1788. Around October 21 of the same year, the publishing company of Hall
and Sellers (publishers of the Pennsylvania Gazette) reprinted the first three
essays together with Coxe's fourth essay. See FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION, supra
note 5, at 459.

[75]. Coxe was by no means the only Pennsylvania
federalist to make this argument. See, e.g., NOAH WEBSTER, AN EXAMINATION INTO
THE LEADING PRINCIPLES OF THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION (Oct. 16, 1787), reprinted in
PAMPHLETS ON THE CONSTITUTION OF THE UNITED STATES, PUBLISHED DURING ITS
DISCUSSION BY THE PEOPLE, 1787-1788, at 56 (Paul L. Ford ed., Da Capo Press
1968) (1888) [hereinafter PAMPHLETS].

Before
a standing army can rule, the people must be disarmed; as they are in almost
every kingdom in Europe. The supreme power in America cannot enforce unjust
laws by the sword; because the whole body of the people are armed, and
constitute a force superior to any band of regular troops that can be, on any
pretence, raised in the United States.

Id.;
see Foreign Spectator, PHILA. INDEP. GAZETTEER, Sept. 21, 1787, reprinted in 2
DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, supra note 57, at 384 (Microform Supp.) (arguing that
"even the power of a veteran army could not subdue a patriotic militia ten
times its number"). See also A Supplement to the Essay on Federal
Sentiments, PHILA. INDEP. GAZETTEER, Oct. 23, 1787, reprinted in 2 DOCUMENTARY
HISTORY, supra note 57, at 801 (Microform Supp.) ("The whole personal
influence of the Congress, and their parricide army could never prevail over a
hundred thousand men armed and disciplined, owners of the country ....").

[80]. Id. at 623-24. Criticizing the author of the
minority report from the Pennsylvania ratifying convention for the federal
Constitution, Gary Wills claims that the report's author erred by placing
militia rights and hunting rights in the same proposed amendment. See Wills,
supra note 14. But the Pennsylvania minority was, in fact, properly combining
militias and hunting into a unitary arms guarantee, just as the 1776
Pennsylvania State Constitution had done. See supra notes 34-36 and accompanying
text. Perhaps it is Wills, and not the Pennsylvania Founders, who is in error.

[81]. "Philanthropos" (Tench Coxe), To The
People of the United States, PA. GAZETTE, Jan. 16, 1788, reprinted in 15
DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, supra note 5, at 391-93.

[82]. Compare this line with James Harrington's The
Commonwealth of Oceana, a major work of Whig political theory from the previous
century: "The hand which holds this sword is the militia of a nation; and
the militia of a nation is either an army in the field, or ready for the field
upon occasion." James Harrington, The Commonwealth of Oceana (London 1656),
reprinted in THE POLITICAL WORKS OF JAMES HARRINGTON 170 (J.G.A. Pocock ed.,
1977).

[85]. The Federalist Papers were first published in New
York City newspapers between October 27, 1787 and April 2, 1788. See 13
DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, supra note 57, at 490.

[86]. THE FEDERALIST NO. 29, at 179 (Alexander Hamilton)
(Isaac Kramnick ed., 1987). "Little more can reasonably be aimed at, with
respect to the people at large, than to have them properly armed and equipped
...." Id. at 178-79.

What
goes by name of consolidation in Pena. is I suspect at the bottom of the
opposition to the New Govt. almost every where; and I am glad to find you
engaged in developing the subject. I inclose some papers [The Federalist Nos.
45 and 46] in which it has been taken up here, that if any hints are contained
in them, they may be pursued in your enquiry.

[89]. Id. Madison added: "Notwithstanding the
military establishments in the several kingdoms of Europe, which are carried as
far as the public resources will bear, the governments are afraid to trust the
people with arms." Id. Cf. WEBSTER, supra note 75 (noting that most people
in Europe are disarmed, thereby allowing standing armies to rule).

[90]. Other Coxe writings in this period were published in
newspapers in other states. For example, Madison distributed Coxe's "An
American," Address to the Members of the Convention of Virginia, PA.
GAZETTE, May 21, 28, 1788, in 3 AMERICAN MUSEUM 426-33, 544-48 (1788), in
Virginia. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 121 & n.34. Anonymous Coxe articles
also appeared in the Federal Gazette during 1788 to 1790. See id.

It
is not known whether Coxe was "Philodemos," who wrote: "Every
free man has a right to the use of the press, so he has to the use of his
arms." PA. GAZETTE, May 7, 1788, reprinted in 2 DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, supra
note 57, at 2579 (Microform Supp.). A similar link of a free press and the use
of arms appears in Coxe's observation that "the efforts of industry and
genius in the German nation have been successfully applied to subjects of the
most useful and curious nature, and among the several proofs of their
disposition and capacity of such pursuits, are the invention of GUN-POWDER ...
and that of TYPE- FOUNDING." "Philanthropos," To the Friends of
Religion, Morality and Useful Knowledge, PA. GAZETTE, Aug. 6, 1788, at 2.

In
a society in which "Gun-Smiths" marched in the July 4th parade, see
PA. GAZETTE, July 9, 1788, at 3, the benefits of firearms in the hands of the
public were undisputed. In one of the same issues in which "A
Pennsylvanian" appeared, the editor lauded the role of citizens,
"having armed themselves" with muskets, apprehending violent
criminals: "Future villains may now see, however safe they may think
themselves by being armed in the pines, that there are men who will brave the
greatest danger to take them." PA. GAZETTE, Feb. 27, 1788, at 3.

[91]. TENCH COXE, AN EXAMINATION OF THE CONSTITUTION FOR
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 18-19, in PAMPHLETS, supra note 75, at 147-48.

[93]. See "A Freeman" (Tench Coxe), To the
Minority of the Convention of Pennsylvania, PA. GAZETTE, Jan. 23, 1788,
reprinted in FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION, supra note 5, at 92; "A
Freeman" (Tench Coxe), To the Minority of the Convention of Pennsylvania,
PA. GAZETTE (Phila.), Jan. 30, 1788, reprinted in FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION,
supra note 5, at 93. See also "An American Citizen" (Tench Coxe), An
Examination of the Constitution of the United States (Phila., Hall & Sellers
1788), reprinted in FRIENDS OF THE CONSTITUTION, supra note 5, at 475 (noting
that states, not the federal government, would control the appointment of
various important posts, including "Officers of the Militia").

[94]. See 2 THE RECORDS OF THE FEDERAL CONVENTION OF 1787,
at 340-42 (M. Farrand ed., 1911) (describing Roger Sherman's opposition to a
bill of rights at its initial proposition by George Mason).

[95]. See STEPHEN P. HALBROOK, THAT EVERY MAN BE ARMED:
THE EVOLUTION OF A CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT 68 (1984).

[96]. See, e.g., James Wilson, State House Speech (Oct. 6,
1787), in 2 DOCUMENTARY HISTORY, supra note 57, at 168 (arguing that, because
Congress lacked an enumerated power to regulate the press, a proposed amendment
guaranteeing freedom of the press would be superfluous).

[99]. See THE ORIGIN OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT, supra note
13, at x1-x1ii.

[100]. 1 ANNALS OF CONG. 434 (Joseph Gales ed., 1834). As
adopted, the following became the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution more
concisely stated: "A well regulated militia, being necessary to the
security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall
not be infringed." U.S. Const. amend II. As to the deleted clause
concerning the religiously scrupulous, see Coxe's undated manuscript on the
invalidity of pacifist arguments against support for a militia in Papers of
Tench Coxe, supra note 7, Reel 114, at 38.

[103]. See "A Pennsylvanian" (Tench Coxe),
Remarks on the First Part of the Amendments to the Federal Constitution, FED.
GAZETTE (Phila.), June 18, 1789, reprinted in THE ORIGIN OF THE SECOND
AMENDMENT, supra note 13, at 670- 72.

[104]. Id. The amendments had been published in the issue
of June 16, 1789. See FED. GAZETTE (Phila.), June 16, 1789, at 2. The first page
of newspapers of the time normally was reserved for advertisements and official
notices.

[110]. Coxe thereby reversed his early stand that there
was no need to list rights which Congress had no power to infringe:

It
has been argued by many against a bill of rights, that the omission of some in
making the detail would one day draw into question those that should not be
particularized. It is therefore provided, that no inference of that kind shall
be made, so as to diminish much less to alienate an ancient tho' unnoticed
right, nor shall either of the branches of the Federal Government argue from
such omission any increase or extension of their powers.

"A
Pennsylvanian" (Tench Coxe), Remarks on the Second Part of the Amendments,
FED. GAZETTE (Phila.), June 30, 1789, at 2, reprinted in THE ORIGIN OF THE
SECOND AMENDMENT, supra note 13, at 674-76. As adopted, the Ninth Amendment to
the Constitution provides: "The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain
rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the
people." U.S. Const. amend. IX.

A
review of subsequent issues in the above newspapers reveals agreement with
Coxe's analysis that the Amendments guaranteed freedoms which Congress had no
authority to infringe anyway. "One of the People" wrote, in the
Federal Gazette, that "the very idea of a bill of rights" is "a
dishonorable one to freemen." "One of the People," On a Bill of
Rights, FED. GAZETTE (Phila.), July 2, 1789, reprinted in THE ORIGIN OF THE
SECOND AMENDMENT, supra note 13, at 676-78.

What
should we think of a gentlemen, who, upon hiring a waitingman, should say to
him-"my friend, please take notice, before we come together, that I shall
always claim the liberty of eating when and what I please, of fishing and
hunting upon my own ground, of keeping as many horses and hounds as I can
maintain, and of speaking and writing any sentiments upon all subjects."

Id.
In short, as a mere servant, the government had no power to interfere with
individual liberties in any manner absent a specific delegation: "[A]
master reserves to himself ... every thing else which he has not committed to
the care of those servants." Id.

[111]. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 242. As Commissioner
of the Revenue, Coxe received what appeared to be an attempted bribe regarding
the construction of a lighthouse off of Cape Hatteras in North Carolina. See
COOKE, supra note 4, at 294-95. Coxe promptly reported the attempted bribe to
Attorney General Ingersoll, and the case eventually made its way to the United
States Supreme Court. See United States v. Worrall, 2 U.S. 384 (1798)
(discussing venue for federal crimes). At the time Coxe rejected the bribe, he
was "financially pressed" by the need to support his large family, as
Coxe would be for most of the rest of his life. See HUTCHESON, supra note 3, at
41.

[113]. Coxe made his views known in a forcefully worded
letter to Hugh Henry Brackenridge, a prominent author in western Pennsylvania
(and a future chief justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court). See HUTCHESON,
supra note 2, at 36 & n. 132. For more on the Whiskey Rebellion, see Gerald
Carson, Watermelon Armies and Whiskey Boys, in RIOT, ROUT, AND TUMULT: READINGS
IN AMERICAN SOCIAL AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE 70 (Roger Lane & John J. Turner,
Jr. eds., 1978).

[114]. See Henigan, supra note 10, at 110 ("[The
Standard Model] amounts to the startling assertion of a generalized
constitutional right of all citizens to engage in armed insurrection against
their government.").

[115]. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 244 (noting Coxe's
support for the principle of obedience to the law during the uprising).

[116]. TENCH COXE, A VIEW OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
IN A SERIES OF PAPERS WRITTEN AT VARIOUS TIMES, IN THE YEARS BETWEEN 1787 AND
1794 (Augustus M. Kelley ed., Bookseller 1965) (1794).

[118]. See HUTCHESON, supra note 3, at 143.
Unfortunately, Coxe failed to foresee the impact that cotton cultivation would
have on his hopes for the abolition of slavery.
Focusing on some of Coxe's earlier writings, technology historian Leo Marx ranks
Coxe as one of the greatest American political economists for daring to
challenge "the whole body of respectable economic theory," which
claimed that America never could become an important manufacturing nation. LEO
MARX, MACHINE IN THE GARDEN: TECHNOLOGY AND THE PASTORAL IDEAL IN AMERICA 153
(1967)... Marx argues that Coxe was one of the very first to understand how
America-with vast natural resources and a relatively small labor supply-enjoyed
ideal conditions for the rapid development of technology. See id. at 153- 63.

[123]. See TENCH COXE, OBSERVATIONS ON THE AGRICULTURE,
MANUFACTURES, AND COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES IN A LETTER TO A MEMBER OF
CONGRESS 32-33 (N.Y., Francis Childs & John Swaine 1789), cited in
HUTCHESON, supra note 3, at 94.

[124]. See COXE, supra note 116, at 334 ("We have
actually almost ceased to import ... gunpowder ...."). Coxe's book is
loaded with economic data. Between October 1, 1790 and September 30, 1791, the
United States exported 160 dozen muskets and 25,854 pounds of gunpowder. See id.
at 406, 408. During the next fiscal year, the United States exported 42 dozen
muskets, all from New York, plus 467 quarter casks for gunpowder from
Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, and Maryland. See id. at
415-16. In the 1792-1793 fiscal year, the United States exported 1,286 quarter
casks of gun powder. See id. at 473.

Tariff schedules for imports were as follows: firearms not otherwise enumerated
(starting on July 1, 1794) 15% ad valorum; gunpowder, free from May 22, 1794
until May 22, 1795, thereafter 10%; lead and musket ball, free for the same time
as gunpowder, thereafter 1 cents per pound; muskets and fire locks ["fire
lock" is an alternative term for "matchlock," a type of long gun
in which the shooter ignites the gunpowder by lighting a match to a short fuse]
with bayonets fitted to frame, free for the same time as gunpowder, thereafter
15%; muskets and fire locks without bayonets, 15%; pistols, free for the same
period as gunpowder, thereafter 15%. See id. at 459-65.

One
of Coxe's essays described how a model town might be built on the Susquehanna
River, using money raised in a capital subscription. Among the economic units to
be constructed in the town would be "Two boring and grinding mills for
guns, scythes, sickles, &c." and "Two gun smith's shops." Id.
at 390-91. Pointing to the vast tracts of unsettled forest land in the United
States, Coxe suggested that they could be cleared speedily and settled by
persons making, among other products, "gun-stocks and other military
implements for the sea and land service." Id. at 450.

In
an essay describing "the principal facts, which characterize the American
people," with the intent to make America appear attractive to immigrants,
Coxe on one page extolled the complete freedom of religion, and on the next page
bragged that "[t]he production and manufactures of military supplies and
articles, enable the United States to derive from their own resources, ships of
war, gun-powder, cannon and musket-balls, shells and bombs, cannon and
carriages, muskets, rifles and cutlasses ... holsters," and various other
military equipment. Id. at 427, 438-39.

[125]. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 293-308. While out of
federal office, Coxe served as secretary of the Pennsylvania Land Office. In
that capacity, he did an outstanding job of protecting the rights of farmers and
settlers against the illegal encroachments of speculators. See id. at 365-70;
see also Holland Land Co. v. Coxe, 4 U.S. (4 Dall.) 170 (1803) (discussing the
legality of land claims rejected by Coxe in his capacity as secretary).

[128]. See id. at 344-45, see generally RICHARD N.
ROSENFELD, AMERICAN AURORA: A DEMOCRATIC-REPUBLICAN RETURNS: THE SUPPRESSED
HISTORY OF OUR NATION'S BEGINNINGS AND THE HEROIC NEWSPAPER THAT TRIED TO REPORT
IT (1998).

[144]. See, e.g., Coxe et al., To the Republican Citizens
of the State of Pennsylvania, AURORA (Phila.), Sept. 27, 1800, at 2 ("It is
greatly to be regretted, too, that so extensive an authority to levy regular
troops relaxed the attention to the Militia, and (with the new and extensive
plan of volunteers) tended to diminish the wholesome influence of that
Constitutional force."); Tench Coxe, Address to the Citizens of the County
of Lancaster, AURORA (Phila.), Sept. 18, 1800, at 3 (warning against the dangers
of an army and a monarchy).

Coxe
could have been the author, or at least agreed with the sentiments of an article
signed "FACT" and entitled The Touchstone, No. II, AURORA (Phila.),
Aug. 12, 1800, at 2, which argued:

With
five millions of people America had a million of militia, a million of men
able to bear arms. A foreigner, knowing of this grand constitutional mean of
defence, would at once suppose that the President, as constitutional commander
in Chief of the public force, had labored night and day to prepare the militia
for the much talked of invasion by the French.

Id.
The same author continued to report that Adams did nothing to check the army
with the militia: "Mr. Adams before his Installation promised attention to
the militia. 'A well regulated militia is necessary to the security of a FREE
state,' says the fourth [proposed] Amendment of the Constitution." Id. In
other nations, mercenaries conjoin "the people (when unarmed and
undisciplined) to kick the Beam." Id. In other words, mercenaries have an
advantage over unarmed citizens. The purse, the executive, and the sword
"require a well regulated militia to counterbalance and check them."
Id. See also Tench Coxe, Address to the Citizens of the County of Lancaster,
AURORA (Phila.), Sept. 18, 1800, at 3 (echoing these arguments).

[145]. See "A Constitutionalist" (Tench Coxe),
The Friends of the Constitution to the People of the United States, Nos. 1-7,
AURORA (Phila.), Sept. 19, 21, 22, 24, 25, 29, 30, 1800.

[146]. Coxe failed to address Adams's defense of the
right to have and use arms for resistance to oppression and for individual
self-defense. Compare Tench Coxe, The Friends of the Constitution to the People
of the United States, AURORA (Phila.), Sept. 21, 1800, at 2, with 3 JOHN ADAMS,
A DEFENCE OF THE CONSTITUTIONS OF GOVERNMENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
471-75 (Boston, Freeman 1983) (1787-1788). In A Defence of the Constitutions,
Adams, troubled by Shays' Rebellion, argued for a system of government using
checks and balances, in which no one force-not even the people-would have
unrestrained power. One implementation of the checking principle was that there
should be a universal militia; this popular force should not be under the
command of the popular branch of government (the legislature), but under the
sole command of the executive. Adams described "arms in the hands of
citizens, to be used at individual discretion" only for "private self-defence"
as consistent with good government, but mass use of arms when not under
executive control as destructive of government. See id.

[147]. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 158. Coxe met Rush
through their mutual work in the Pennsylvania anti-slavery society. See id. at
92-93.

[149]. While Jefferson was at first inclined to give Coxe
a job, the presumptuous tone of Coxe's office-seeking letters alienated
Jefferson. See id. at 392-99. Although the two men resumed a professional
relationship when Coxe joined the Jefferson administration, the relationship
remained cool. See id. at 458.

[150]. See HENRY J. KAUFFMAN, THE PENNSYLVANIA-KENTUCKY
RIFLE 82 (1960). Like Coxe, Gallatin considered the right to arms one of the
many human rights protected by the Bill of Rights: "The whole of that Bill
is a declaration of the right of the people at large or considered as
individuals .... It establishes some rights of the individual as unalienable and
which, consequently, no majority has a right to deprive them of." Letter
from Albert Gallatin to Alexander Addison (Oct. 7, 1789) (on file with the New
York Historical Society), quoted in HALBROOK, supra note 95, at 225 n.169.

[151]. Coxe's appointment was ironic. As Alexander
Hamilton's Commissioner of Revenue, Coxe had been ordered to supervise the
purchase of supplies for the Army and for the state militias involved in
suppressing the Whiskey Rebellion. Although Coxe continued to support strongly
the crushing of the Pennsylvania insurrection, he resented Hamilton's giving him
a task with considerably less policy influence than Coxe was used to. Hamilton's
decision, and Coxe's angry reaction, led to the final break between Coxe and
Hamilton; the relationship had been under strain due to Coxe's growing
friendship with Thomas Jefferson, and Coxe's failure to accept that he was
Hamilton's subordinate, not his equal. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 262-64. As a
result of the conflict in the Treasury Department, Congress created the post of
Purveyor of Public Supplies. The first person to serve in the job was Tench
Francis (Coxe's grandfather); although Francis had built a distinguished record
of public service, see supra notes 27-28 and accompanying text, he was past his
prime, and unable to organize the purveyor's office efficiently. See COOKE,
supra note 4, at 413.

[156]. President Madison was just as ardent as his
predecessor in wanting an armed militia. In Madison's First Inaugural Address,
he announced his goal "to keep within the requisite limits a standing
military force, always remembering that an armed and trained militia is the
firmest bulwark of republics-that without standing armies their liberty can
never be in danger, nor with large ones safe." James Madison, First
Inaugural Address (Mar. 4, 1809), in JAMES MADISON, 1751-1836, at 37 (Ian Elliot
ed., 1969). In his Second Annual Message to Congress, Madison praised the
armament program, and urged that training be increased:

These
preparations for arming the militia having thus far provided for one of the
objects contemplated by the power vested in Congress with respect to that
great bulwark of the public safety, it is for their consideration whether
further provisions are not requisite for the other contemplated objects of
organization and discipline.

James
Madison, Second Annual Message to Congress (Dec. 5, 1810), in JAMES MADISON,
1751-1836, supra, at 56.

[157]. See Letter from Tench Coxe to Thomas Jefferson
(Jan. 1807), reprinted in JEFFERSON PAPERS (on file in the Library of Congress).

[166]. "A stand of arms consists of a musket,
bayonet, cartridge-box and belt, with a sword. But for common soldiers a sword
is not necessary." 1 NOAH WEBSTER, AN AMERICAN DICTIONARY OF THE ENGLISH
LANGUAGE 13 (New York, S. Converse 9th ed. 1996) (1828).

[173]. TENCH COXE, THOUGHTS ON THE SUBJECT OF NAVAL POWER
IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA: AND ON CERTAIN MEANS OF ENCOURAGING AND
PROTECTING THEIR COMMERCE AND MANUFACTURE NO. II, at 1 (Phila. 1807). This also
was published under pen-name "Pacificus" in the Philadelphia
Democratic Press on May 29, 1807.

[179]. COXE, supra note 173, at 2. Nos. III-VI were
printed in the Philadelphia Democratic Press on June 1, 3, 5, 8, 1807.
By the time of his 1807 articles on naval power, Coxe found, in a new
periodical, an agreeable philosophical stance that would result in the
periodical being the main outlet for expression of Coxe's views for the next
decade and a half. John Binns, editor of the Philadelphia Democratic Press,
formulated this stance in the first issues:

That
every capable man in the Union should be armed and disciplined, so as to be
ready to rise en mass, and hurl destruction on the foe who should dare to
pollute our shores with hostile feet is a truth which it shall be the pride
and pleasure of the Editor frequently to inculcate.

John
Binns, To the Public, DEMOCRATIC PRESS (Phila.), Mar. 30, 1807, at 1. See also
Defence of the Seaports, DEMOCRATIC PRESS (Phila.), Apr. 3, 1807, at 3
(supporting the "provision of the instruments, implements, and utensils of
defence for the militia in their vicinity: Cannon, battering and field, iron and
brass; ovens for heating balls; mortars and shells; horse artillery; muskets,
rifles, pistols, swords and bayonets"); Standing Army, DEMOCRATIC PRESS (Phila.),
June 8, 1807, at 2 (advocating that the sword rules). That arms were to be
handled only in a safe manner was implicit in such headlines as "Careless
Use of Firearms-AGAIN," DEMOCRATIC PRESS (Phila.), May 25, 1807, at 2
(describing boys hunting in New York, and a half-cocked firearm discharging,
killing a fourteen-year-old boy).

When
Tench Coxe, at the close of the Revolution, turned his prophetic eye and his
practical instinct to the manufacturing development of his country, he was
thwarted in his efforts by the impossibility of obtaining the machinery with
which to start the enterprises he had in mind.... Colonel North devised and
worked out the principle of interchangeable parts .... He applied and
developed it in the manufacture of pistols ....

Id.
at 90-91.

Extensive
information on Coxe's dealings with the firearms manufacturers is presented in 1
JAMES E. HICKS, NOTES ON UNITED STATES ORDNANCE 29-39 (1940).

[186]. See, e.g., Michael Bellesiles, The Origins of Gun
Culture in the United States, 1760-1865, 83 J. Am. Hist. 425, 428-34, 454 (1996)
(arguing that Madison formulated the Amendment as a political response to
anti-federalists and attempted to deliver on his promise of a state- controlled
militia supported by the federal government).

[187]. For example, Americans today are required to read
the IRS Form 1040 and associated documents, or to pay someone else to read it
for them.

[188]. While the proposed United States Constitution was
debated, the government of Pennsylvania attempted to collect the public arms for
cleaning and maintenance. A very large number of Pennsylvanians, however,
refused to surrender their public arms even temporarily-fearing that the new
federal government might be oppressive and that the Pennsylvania government
might be attempting to prevent resistance to that government. See THE ORIGIN OF
THE SECOND AMENDMENT, supra note 13, at 176, 191, 194, 200-01, 221, 226, 251,
286, 298, 334, 340 (reprinting letters and newspaper articles relating to the
controversy from December 1787 to April 1788). For another discussion of public
arms belonging to the government, see Minutes of the Executive Council of
Georgia (May 28, 1784), reprinted in 2 THE REVOLUTIONARY RECORDS OF THE STATE OF
GEORGIA 655 (Allen D. Candler ed., 1908) (ordering a private contractor to be
paid for cleaning firearms, because, "the public arms, belonging to this
State are much neglected, and, at present, in very bad order and
condition").

[191]. "A Pennsylvanian" (Tench Coxe), Remarks
on the First Part of the Amendments to the Federal Constitution, FED. GAZETTE (Phila.),
June 18, 1789, reprinted in THE ORIGIN OF THE SECOND AMENDMENT, supra note 13,
at 670-72.

[196]. Letter from Tench Coxe to William Eustis (Nov. 10,
1810), reprinted in HICKS, supra note 185, at 29. But see John Adams, Speech to
Both Houses of Congress (Nov. 22, 1800), in 9 THE WORKS OF JOHN ADAMS, SECOND
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES 146 (Boston, Little, Brown & Co., Charles
Francis Adams ed., 1854) (supporting the domestic manufacture of arms); COXE,
supra note 116, at 120 (claiming that the American arms industry was healthy
during the Washington administration).

[199]. See COOKE, supra note 4, at 480. Coxe's hard work
on arms procurement did not lead to any personal financial gain on his part as
an arms merchant. He was buying for the federal government, not selling to it
and, thus, could not profit from the increased demand resulting from his militia
program. If Coxe had remained at his trading company while someone else carried
out the arms acquisitions, Coxe doubtless would have enjoyed some increased
business, although arms were not a particularly large share of his total
revenues.

[201]. See id. at 473. Duane and Coxe, having once been
allies, had become bitter enemies as a result of a factional dispute in the
Pennsylvania Republican party in 1804. See id. at 346-47. Duane's disagreements
with Coxe were based on personalities, not policy. Like Coxe, Duane was a strong
advocate of a popular militia, and a fierce opponent of permanent federal
military establishments. See WILLIAM DUANE, EXPERIENCE: THE TEST OF GOVERNMENT
55 (Phila., William Duane 1807) (proposing amendments to the Pennsylvania
Constitution to ensure that militia officers would be chosen by militiamen);
WILIAM DUANE, POLITICS FOR AMERICAN FARMERS 8-10 (Phila., R.C. Weightman 1807)
(condemning a large navy, and praising Coxe's essay on the subject).

[208]. The fourth and final number is in AURORA (Phila.),
Jan. 19, 1811, at 2. While some of his charges appeared to have been based on
rumor, Duane's expertise on the subject of firearms is clear. See WILLIAM DUANE,
A MILITARY DICTIONARY (Phila., William Duane 1810); WILLIAM DUANE, THE AMERICAN
MILITARY LIBRARY (Phila., William Duane 1809).

The
want of a sufficient number of pattern pistols or indeed of one to guide each
maker, and the want of even one pattern rifle, for the office, has produced
much real difficulty .... The entire want of practice in military pistol
making, ... the general habits of using German and other imported locks for
rifles and pistols, prevailing among the armourers, and the great difficulty,
which the late Secretary found ... to refuse permission to use such locks as
the two German locks and the pistol locks of Lancaster, which the purveyor
submitted to him, will be remembered and considered.

[220]. See id. He received: (1) "200 pistol
barrels" by Joseph Henry; (2) "The pair of pistols from Mr. Shuler,
near Quaker Town with German locks, said to be improved here"; (3)
"Military rifles, received from Lancaster, Pennsylvania ... by Henry DeHuff
and Co. sometimes called Peter Gonter and Co. since the death of Mr. DeHuff; and
by Abraham Henry, John Guest and Peter Brong and company"; and (4) the
Indian rifles of J. Guest and Dickert ...." In addition, he noted:
"The Proofs of musket barrels, and inspection of muskets, under the
contracts of the Henry's, J. Miles, Nippes, Steinman and Winner, &c. in
Pennsylvania and New Jersey will require early and effectual attention
..."; "The arms of Ginok (Hanoverian) require an early and complete
cleaning ..."; and "Rifles and pistols made by A. Henry, J. Guest and
P. Brong for army use, and of rifles made by J. Guest, for Indian use." See
id.

[221]. See NORM FLAYDERMAN, GUIDE TO ANTIQUE AMERICAN
FIREARMS AND THEIR VALUES (2d ed. 1980). Joseph Henry Contract Type Flintlock
Pistols were made in Philadelphia from 1807-1808 as contract pistols and for
private sale. See id. at 298-99. The John Shuler Contract Flintlock Pistol was
made in Liverpool, Pennsylvania during the same period. See id. at 301. Henry
DeHuff, Abraham Henry, Peter Brong, and Jacob Dickert, all of Lancaster, sold
muskets to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania under a 1797 legislative act. See
id. at 423-24. John Miles of Bordertown, N.J., and James Winner, Abraham Nippes,
and John Steinman of Philadelphia produced the Model 1808 musket. See id. at
429. Miles also made various pistols in 58-64 caliber range in Philadelphia. See
id. at 300. At times, John Guest of Lancaster made pistols using Sweitzer locks.
See id. at 297, 301. For further information on DeHuff, A. Henry, Shuler, and J.
Henry, see SAMUEL E. DYKE, THOUGHTS ON TH AMERICAN FLINTLOCK PISTOL 8, 20, 24
(1974). Most rifles and pistols were manufactured in Eastern Pennsylvania due to
the settlement of gunsmiths from Central and Southern Europe there, and the
concentration of mines and furnaces in the area. See id. at 7.

It will be admitted by those who are acquainted with arms, that the
manufacture of rifles and pistols, is little known except in the public
armories, and excepting, as to rifles, in parts of one or two states.-
Workman's skills and inspectoral judgment in these branches are rare. Perhaps
we have not even settled good standards. If imperfections exist in the rifles
and pistols, I am now well satisfied that some pronounce upon them, who have
never inspected a score ....
Sixteen hundred rifles and eleven hundred pistols, made before we had lock
forgers and inspectors, though at low prices for the country and under
"strict and rigorous" contracts, seem to be the sum of that matter.
... From some lessons of late experience and observation, I am inclined to
believe, that there are few countries, if any, which have reached the
principles of the right construction of a musket, a pistol and a rifle.

[224]. A "touch hole ... in early guns, before
invention of the various lock or firing systems, [was] a hole or vent at the
rear of the firearm which connected from the outside of the barrel to the
chamber of the gun containing the powder charge." R.A. STEINDLER, THE
FIREARMS DICTIONARY 257 (1970).

[225]. AURORA (Phila.), Dec. 21, 1811, at 2. Duane also
made charges about supposedly inadequate uniforms purchased, and the rejection
of a quantity of swords manufactured by a Richmond workman named Winner. See id.
In the December 23, 1811 issue of the Aurora, Duane claimed that the purveyor
discouraged American arms manufacture, resulting in the best workmen removing
themselves to South America. See AURORA (Phila.), Dec. 23, 1811, at 2. The same
article reiterates the allegation of "the admission of rifles without
grooves or touchholes" and repeats a rumor "that when a demand was
made for pistols, when an apprehension was entertained of a conflict in Florida,
that these very pistols were ... totally unfit." Id.

[227]. See id. As to the swords, the purveyor
"justly doubts the fitness of American steel," but in any case the
swords were rejected by the inspector. Id. Certain German steel swords were also
rejected. As to the German locks on some rifles, the secretary of war in
Washington specifically approved them. Coxe reiterated that he was "a
merchant and not a manufacturer" and, therefore, dependent on
recommendations and directives by government officials and firearms specialists.
Id. He added:

Much
difficulty occurs in procuring standard patterns, and inspectors. The vastly
greater failure of the state of Virginia in manufacturing arms, proves
this.... I can safely appeal to the Secretary of War, in regard to my giving
material aid to him in the improvement of pistols, swords and other matters
....

Id.

[228]. See AURORA (Phila.), Jan. 14, 17, 18, 1812, at 1.
Duane concentrated on buttons received by the purveyor which supposedly were
unfit. See id.

[229]. See Tench Coxe, To the Public, DEMOCRATIC PRESS (Phila.),
Jan. 18, 1812, at 2. Coxe once again appealed "[t]o the [p]ublic,"
reiterating that the arms mentioned by Duane had passed inspection by two
government officers. See id. He added that Duane overlooked the fact that Coxe
was acting at the direction of the secretary of war: "I have procured the
Calibre of the Harper's Ferry pattern pistol to be rejected by the present
Secretary of War, on explicit military reasons and one of about twice the size
adopted." Id.

[244]. See supra notes 68-72 and accompanying text.
Whether cannon or other light artillery are within the scope of the
"arms" whose private possession the Second Amendment protects is
beyond the scope of this article. The published scholarship that examines the
issue concludes that the Amendment, while protecting all (or almost all) types
of firearms, does not protect artillery. See Halbrook, What the Framers
Intended, supra note 9; Kates, supra note 9, at 258-61; Don B. Kates, Jr., The
Second Amendment: A Dialogue, 49 L. & CONTEMP. PROBS. 148 (1986); Nelson
Lund, The Past and Future of the Individual's Right to Arms, 31 GA. L. REV. 1,
41-46 (1996). Cannon were not regulated until 1968, and individuals now may
possess them legally if registered with the federal government. See Gun Control
Act of 1968, P.L. 90- 618, Title II, 82 Stat. 1213, 1227 (1968).

[246]. Of course, some citizens might not have paid
attention to the quality of their firearm, and others might not have known
enough to discern poor workmanship. But on the whole, it is reasonable to expect
that, at the least, a large number of purchasers would pay careful attention
when buying a product on which their lives would depend. Today, there are many
people who buy firearms with little attention to quality, and many others who
purchase with great attention to detail.

[247]. Madison and Coxe corresponded about the American
economy and politics; Madison also wrote to President Monroe urging an
appointment for Coxe's son. See Letter from James Madison to Tench Coxe (Feb.
12, 1819), reprinted in 3 LETTERS AND OTHER WRITINGS OF JAMES MADISON,
1816-1828, at 116 (Phila., R. Worthington 1865) [hereinafter WRITINGS OF
MADISON]; Letter from James Madison to Tench Coxe (Mar. 20, 1820), reprinted in
WRITINGS OF MADISON, supra,
at 170; Letter from James Madison to Tench Coxe (Nov. 4, 1820), reprinted in
WRITINGS OF MADISON, supra,
at 184; Letter from James Madison to Tench Coxe (Feb. 21, 1823), reprinted
in WRITINGS OF MADISON, supra, at 301 ("I have forwarded the letters, with
the printed papers, to Mr. Jefferson. I know well the respect which he, as well
as myself, attaches to your communications."); Letter from James Madison to
Tench Coxe (Mar. 1, 1823), reprinted in WRITINGS OF MADISON, supra, at 304.

Mr.
Jefferson has just returned your two letters and papers. Supposing that I had
yet to acknowledge them, he annexes a line requesting me to do it for him
also; observing that it would hurt him much to leave unnoticed an old friend,
and that the difficulty of using his pen with his crippled hand had compelled
him to abandon writing but from the most urgent necessities.

Id.;
Letter from James Madison to Tench Coxe (Oct. 12, 1823), reprinted in WRITINGS
OF MADISON, supra, at 337; Letter of James Madison to Tench Coxe (Nov. 3, 1823),
reprinted in WRITINGS OF MADISON, supra, at 341.

[248]. COOKE, supra note 4, at 521 (quoting Letter from
Thomas Jefferson to Tench Coxe (Nov. 11, 1820)). Jefferson apparently retained
so much interest in what Coxe had to say that Jefferson complained about Coxe's
handwriting which, by 1823, had deteriorated so badly that Jefferson found
reading it to be like "decomposing and recomposing ... hieroglyphics."
JOHN MORTON BLUM, THE REPUBLICAN ROOSEVELT 142 (1952).

[256]. See Letters from Tench Coxe, in HICKS, supra note
192, at 28, 31 (1940) (discussing the common bore and "public arms").
Firearms at that time were manufactured with many bore sizes and, consequently,
bullets often were not interchangeable, a situation Coxe had sought to alleviate
as purveyor of public supplies in respect to the public arms he obtained. See
id.

[267]. See id. Publicola's main purpose was to support
President Washington's policy of neutrality in the war between England and
France, as opposed to the followers of Jefferson, who wanted the United States
to side with France.

[284]. See "Sherman" (Tench Coxe), Manuscript
for "To the People of the United States," in PAPERS OF TENCH COXE,
supra note 7, Reel 113, at 713. The article was No. IX of a series with this
title apparently published in the Democratic Press or in the Philadelphia
Centinel and Mercantile Advertiser in 1823 or, possibly, 1824. The authors could
not locate the issue in which the article appeared. (The pen-name
"Sherman" appears in the Democratic Press, Dec. 24, 1823.)

[286]. Id. at 715. Coxe was not entirely accurate here.
The 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen said nothing about
hunting or the right to arms. See Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the
Citizen (1789), reprinted in THE GREAT DOCUMENTS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION 192
(Milton Viorst ed., 1965). The 1789 Decree to Abolish the Feudal System said
nothing about the right to arms but did establish comprehensively a right to
hunt:

III.
The exclusive right to hunt and to maintain uninclosed warrens is likewise
abolished, and every landowner shall have the right to kill, or to have
destroyed on his own land, all kinds of game, observing, however, such police
regulations as may be established with a view to the safety of the public.
All hunting capitaineries [preserves], including the royal forests, and all
hunting rights under whatever denomination, are likewise abolished. Provision
shall be made, however, in a manner compatible with the regard due to property
and liberty, for maintaining the personal pleasures of the king.
The president of the Assembly shall be commissioned to ask of the king the
recall of those sent to the galleys or exiled, simply for violations of
hunting regulations, as well as for the release of those at present imprisoned
for offenses of this kind, and the dismissal of such cases as are now pending.

Decree
to Abolish the Feudal System (1789), reprinted in THE GREAT DOCUMENTS OF WESTERN
CIVILIZATION, supra, at 186-87.

[288]. See William Rawle, A View of the Constitution of
the United States of America 125-26 (Da Capo Press 1970) (2d ed. 1829); 3 Joseph
Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States 747 (Da Capo Press
1970) (1833); 3 St. George Tucker, Blackstone's Commentaries with Notes of
Reference to the Constitution and Laws of the Federal Government of the United
States and the Commonwealth of Virginia 414 n.3 (The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd.
1996) (1803).

[289]. HALBROOK, supra note 97, at 51-53; JOYCE LEE
MALCOLM, THE RIGHT TO KEEP AND BEAR ARMS: THE ORIGINS OF AN ANGLO-AMERICAN RIGHT
126-30 (1994).

[293]. Id. at 717. At the time Coxe wrote, Spain and
Portugal were enjoying brief periods of constitutional liberalism, and the
republican wars of independence in Latin American were all but victorious.

[296]. Letter from Tench Coxe to Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison (Jan. 31, 1823), reprinted in MADISON PAPERS, supra note 14, at
5-6. In a second letter to Jefferson and Madison written a day later, Coxe
warned that "the times are most dangerous to the cause of liberty,
religious and civil, in Europe, and since a total failure (by power, numbers,
arms[,] and combination) there, will endanger us and our system, in the two
Americas." Letter from Tench Coxe to Thomas Jefferson and James Madison
(Feb. 1, 1823), reprinted in MADISON PAPERS, supra note 14, at 2. Coxe suggested
that the circulation of the newspapers which published the above articles
"in your parts of the country" would be useful in the coming
presidential election. Id. at 3.

[297]. Letter from James Madison to Tench Coxe (Mar. 1,
1823) (available in JAMES MADISON PAPERS (on file in the Library of Congress).

[302]. See Ehrlman & Henigan, supra note 10, at 57
("[T]here is no substantial historical evidence for the claim that the
second amendment guarantees an individual right to have arms for any purpose
other than participation in a state-regulated militia.").

[303]. Cf.
Patsone v. Pennsylvania, 232 U.S. 138, 143 (1914) (upholding a law depriving
aliens of guns for hunting because the law did not affect arms for
self-defense).

[304]. "Sidney" (Tench Coxe), To the Friends of
the Principles of the Constitution, DEMOCRATIC PRESS (Phila.), Jan. 23, 1823, at
2.

[308]. See supra note 146 and accompanying text. In 1823,
the same year Coxe attacked the Adamses for the last time, the senior Adams
reaffirmed his commitment to a universal militia and his opposition to a select
militia and standing army. See WILLIAM H. SUMNER, AN INQUIRY INTO THE IMPORTANCE
OF THE MILITIA TO A FREE COMMONWEALTH; IN A LETTER FROM WILLIAM H. SUMNER TO
JOHN ADAMS WITH HIS ANSWER 69-70 (Boston, Cummings & Hilliard 1823).

[309].
Coxe was, of course, not the equal of the men for whom he worked- Hamilton,
Jefferson, and Madison; his conduct at the start of the Revolution, his
personality flaws and his partisanship ensured, despite his writing ability and
his energy, that he would be in the second rank of the Founders, not the first.

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